Article

A global risk assessment of primates under climate and land use/cover scenarios

Details

Citation

Carvalho JS, Graham B, Rebelo H, Bocksberger G, Meyer CFJ, Wich S & Kuhl HS (2019) A global risk assessment of primates under climate and land use/cover scenarios. Global Change Biology, 25 (9), pp. 3163-3178. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14671

Abstract
Primates are facing an impending extinction crisis, driven by extensive habitat loss, land use change, and hunting. Climate change is an additional threat, which alone or in combination with other drivers, may severely impact those taxa unable to track suitable environmental conditions. Here, we investigate the extent of climate and land use/cover (LUC) change‐related risks for primates. We employed an analytical approach to objectively select a subset of climate scenarios, for which we then calculated changes in climatic and LUC conditions for 2050 across primate ranges (N=426 species) under a best‐ and a worst‐case scenario. Generalised linear models were used to examine whether these changes varied according to region, conservation status, range extent, and dominant habitat. Finally, we reclassified primate ranges based on different magnitudes of maximum temperature change, and quantified the proportion of ranges overall and of primate hotspots in particular that are likely to be exposed to extreme temperature increases. We found that, under the worst‐case scenario, 74% of Neotropical forest‐dwelling primates are likely to be exposed to maximum temperature increases up to 7°C. In contrast, 38% of Malagasy savanna primates will experience less pronounced warming of up to 3.5°C. About one quarter of Asian and African primates will face up to 50% crop expansion within their range. Primary land (undisturbed habitat) is expected to disappear across species’ ranges, whereas secondary land (disturbed habitat) will increase by up to 98%. With 86% of primate ranges likely to be exposed to maximum temperature increases >3°C, primate hotspots in the Neotropics are expected to be particularly vulnerable. Our study highlights the fundamental exposure risk of a large percentage of primate ranges to predicted climate and LUC changes. Importantly, our findings underscore the urgency with which climate change mitigation measures need to be implemented to avert primate extinctions on an unprecedented scale.

Keywords
climate change; exposure; extinction risk; hazard; land use/cover change; primate conservation; primate hotspots; species range;

Journal
Global Change Biology: Volume 25, Issue 9

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2019
Publication date online29/04/2019
Date accepted by journal16/04/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/29452
ISSN1354-1013
eISSN1365-2486

People (1)

Professor Bruce Graham

Professor Bruce Graham

Emeritus Professor, Computing Science

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