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Vertebrate populations decline and the Living Planet Report

1/26/2022

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The Living Planet Index represents the largest effort to understand wildlife status worldwide. In the 2020 report, the Living Planet Index suggested that, the 20,811 monitored vertebrate populations declined by 68% on average between 1970 and 2016 – an alarming number, calling for better commitment to reduce human impacts on nature.

In November 2020, Leung and colleagues claimed that Living Planet Index is sensitive to extremely declining populations. To demonstrate this, they removed only 2.1% of the extremely declining populations to show no net trends in the remaining global vertebrate populations. Their study, published in the journal Nature, found that these drastically declining populations are restricted to some world regions (e.g., Asia and Indo-Pacific).

In a Matters Arising article published in the latest issue, we show that the sensitivity of the Living Planet Index to the declining population is overstated by Leung et al. as they did not properly account for the effects of extremely increasing populations in their analyses.

When we removed extremely increasing and extremely declining populations in an equal manner, we found the results are very similar to the Living Planet Report (compare the black and yellow lines below).
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Further, we also show that the sampled populations in the Living Planet Report may even be better off than most: they tend to reside in protected areas much more than expected by chance. Therefore, the actual status of most wildlife could be worse than the 68% decline suggested by the Living Planet Index, highlighting the need for greater population monitoring.
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New paper on global patterns of phylogenetic endemism is out in Science Advances!

10/14/2021

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Our work exploring global trends in phylogenetic endemism of land vertebrates is out now at Science Advances!

BloGARD post about the paper 

One sentence summary
We map the most irreplaceable regions for endemic evolutionary history for more than 30,000 species of land vertebrates, identify their geo-climatic determinants, and show that they are particularly threatened by current and future human impacts.

Thankful to my coauthors Uri Roll, Shai Meri, and Rikki Gumbs.

Check out the info-graphics below (click here for a high-resolution PDF).


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