Globally important islands where eradicating invasive mammals will benefit highly threatened vertebrates
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2019 Holmes et al - Eradication ...
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Authors
Holmes, NSpatz, D
Oppel, S
Tershy, B
Croll, D
Keitt, B
Genovesi, P
Burfield, I
Will, D
Bond, A
Wegmann, A
Aguirre-Munoz, A
Raine, A
Knapp, C
Hung, C-H
Wingate, D
Hagen, E
Mendez-Sanchez, F
Rocamora, G
Yuan, H-W
Fric, J
Millett, J
Russell, J
Liske-Clark, J
Vidal, E
Jourdan, H
Campbell, K
Springer, K
Swinnerton, K
Gibbons-Decherong, L
Langrand, O
Brooke, MDL
McMinn, M
Bunbury, N
Oliviera, N
Sposimo, P
Geraldes, P
McClelland, P
Hodum, P
Ryan, P
Borroto-Paez, R
Griffiths, R
Fisher, R
Wanless, R
Pasachnik, S
Cranwell, S
Micol, T
Butchard, S
Issue date
2019-03-27Submitted date
2019-03-28Subject Terms
IslandsInvasive species
Mammals
Vertebrates
Conservation science
Biodiversity
Species extinction
Extinction risk
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Invasive alien species are a major threat to native insular species. Eradicating invasive mammals from islands is a feasible and proven approach to prevent biodiversity loss. We developed a conceptual framework to identify globally important islands for invasive mammal eradications to prevent imminent extinctions of highly threatened species using biogeographic and technical factors, plus a novel approach to consider socio-political feasibility. We applied this framework using a comprehensive dataset describing the distribution of 1,184 highly threatened native vertebrate species (i.e. those listed as Critically Endangered or Endangered on the IUCN Red List) and 184 non-native mammals on 1,279 islands worldwide. Based on extinction risk, irreplaceability, severity of impact from invasive species, and technical feasibility of eradication, we identified and ranked 292 of the most important islands where eradicating invasive mammals would benefit highly threatened vertebrates. When socio-political feasibility was considered, we identified 169 of these islands where eradication planning or operation could be initiated by 2020 or 2030 and would improve the survival prospects of 9.4% of the Earth’s most highly threatened terrestrial insular vertebrates (111 of 1,184 species). Of these, 107 islands were in 34 countries and territories and could have eradication projects initiated by 2020. Concentrating efforts to eradicate invasive mammals on these 107 islands would benefit 151 populations of 80 highly threatened vertebrates and make a major contribution towards achieving global conservation targets adopted by the world’s nations.Citation
Globally important islands where eradicating invasive mammals will benefit highly threatened vertebrates Holmes ND, Spatz DR, Oppel S, Tershy B, Croll DA, et al. (2019) Globally important islands where eradicating invasive mammals will benefit highly threatened vertebrates. PLOS ONE 14(3): e0212128. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212128Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)Journal
PLoS ONEType
Journal ArticleItem Description
This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication.ISSN
1932-6203Collections