The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species includes assessment of extinction risk for 98 512 species, plus documentation of their range, habitat, elevation, and other factors. These range, habitat and elevation data can be matched with terrestrial land cover and elevation datasets to map the species' area of habitat (AOH; also known as extent of suitable habitat; ESH). This differs from the two spatial metrics used for assessing extinction risk in the IUCN Red List criteria: extent of occurrence (EOO) and area of occupancy (AOO). AOH can guide conservation, for example, through targeting areas for field surveys, assessing proportions of species' habitat within protected areas, and monitoring habitat loss and fragmentation. We recommend that IUCN Red List assessments document AOH wherever practical. Rigour and Dynamism in the IUCN Red ListThe IUCN Red List of Threatened Species [1] aspires to assess the extinction risk of the world's species, and to serve as a 'barometer of life' of the state of nature [2]. Of the approximately 2 million named species [3], the IUCN Red List has assessed 98 512 species (having increased from fewer than 20 000 in 2002 i ). The process of assessment classifies species in different categories of extinction risk. It does so through an open, rigorously defined process [4] that is objective and transparent. Petitioners can challenge decisions made by Red List Authorities. An important use of the IUCN Red List is the assessment of changes in species extinction risk to monitor changes in the status of individual species, classes and other groups of species, and species-level biodiversity overall [5,6]. These are essential, for example, in reporting on the Aichi Targets [7] and Sustainable Development Goals [8], as well as progress in conserving species [9].
Investments to prevent tropical deforestation and to limit wildlife trade will protect against future zoonosis outbreaks
Just protecting Earth’s wilderness will not be sufficient to conserve most of its species; quality, not overall size, matters.
The giant panda attracts disproportionate conservation resources. How well does this emphasis protect other endemic species? Detailed data on geographical ranges are not available for plants or invertebrates, so we restrict our analyses to 3 vertebrate taxa: birds, mammals, and amphibians. There are gaps in their protection, and we recommend practical actions to fill them. We identified patterns of species richness, then identified which species are endemic to China, and then which, like the panda, live in forests. After refining each species' range by its known elevational range and remaining forest habitats as determined from remote sensing, we identified the top 5% richest areas as the centers of endemism. Southern mountains, especially the eastern Hengduan Mountains, were centers for all 3 taxa. Over 96% of the panda habitat overlapped the endemic centers. Thus, investing in almost any panda habitat will benefit many other endemics. Existing panda national nature reserves cover all but one of the endemic species that overlap with the panda's distribution. Of particular interest are 14 mammal, 20 bird, and 82 amphibian species that are inadequately protected. Most of these species the International Union for Conservation of Nature currently deems threatened. But 7 mammal, 3 bird, and 20 amphibian species are currently nonthreatened, yet their geographical ranges are <20,000 km(2) after accounting for elevational restriction and remaining habitats. These species concentrate mainly in Sichuan, Yunnan, Nan Mountains, and Hainan. There is a high concentration in the east Daxiang and Xiaoxiang Mountains of Sichuan, where pandas are absent and where there are no national nature reserves. The others concentrate in Yunnan, Nan Mountains, and Hainan. Here, 10 prefectures might establish new protected areas or upgrade local nature reserves to national status.
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