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      Are specialists at risk under environmental change? Neoecological, paleoecological and phylogenetic approaches

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          Abstract

          The question ‘what renders a species extinction prone’ is crucial to biologists. Ecological specialization has been suggested as a major constraint impeding the response of species to environmental changes. Most neoecological studies indicate that specialists suffer declines under recent environmental changes. This was confirmed by many paleoecological studies investigating longer-term survival. However, phylogeneticists, studying the entire histories of lineages, showed that specialists are not trapped in evolutionary dead ends and could even give rise to generalists. Conclusions from these approaches diverge possibly because (i) of approach-specific biases, such as lack of standardization for sampling efforts (neoecology), lack of direct observations of specialization (paleoecology), or binary coding and prevalence of specialists (phylogenetics); (ii) neoecologists focus on habitat specialization; (iii) neoecologists focus on extinction of populations, phylogeneticists on persistence of entire clades through periods of varying extinction and speciation rates; (iv) many phylogeneticists study species in which specialization may result from a lack of constraints. We recommend integrating the three approaches by studying common datasets, and accounting for range-size variation among species, and we suggest novel hypotheses on why certain specialists may not be particularly at risk and consequently why certain generalists deserve no less attention from conservationists than specialists.

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          The Coevolutionary Process

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            EXTINCTION VULNERABILITY AND SELECTIVITY:Combining Ecological and Paleontological Views

            Extinction is rarely random across ecological and geological time scales. Traits that make some species more extinction-prone include individual traits, such as body size, and abundance. Substantial consistency appears across ecological and geological time scales in such traits. Evolutionary branching produces phylogenetic (as often measured by taxonomic) nesting of extinction-biasing traits at many scales. An example is the tendency, seen in both fossil and modern data, for higher taxa living in marine habitats to have generally lower species extinction rates. At lower taxononomic levels, recent bird and mammal extinctions are concentrated in certain genera and families. A fundamental result of such selectivity is that it can accelerate net loss of biodiversity compared to random loss of species among taxa. Replacement of vulnerable taxa by rapidly spreading taxa that thrive in human-altered environments will ultimately produce a spatially more homogenized biosphere with much lower net diversity.
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              Rapid responses of British butterflies to opposing forces of climate and habitat change.

              Habitat degradation and climate change are thought to be altering the distributions and abundances of animals and plants throughout the world, but their combined impacts have not been assessed for any species assemblage. Here we evaluated changes in the distribution sizes and abundances of 46 species of butterflies that approach their northern climatic range margins in Britain-where changes in climate and habitat are opposing forces. These insects might be expected to have responded positively to climate warming over the past 30 years, yet three-quarters of them declined: negative responses to habitat loss have outweighed positive responses to climate warming. Half of the species that were mobile and habitat generalists increased their distribution sites over this period (consistent with a climate explanation), whereas the other generalists and 89% of the habitat specialists declined in distribution size (consistent with habitat limitation). Changes in population abundances closely matched changes in distributions. The dual forces of habitat modification and climate change are likely to cause specialists to decline, leaving biological communities with reduced numbers of species and dominated by mobile and widespread habitat generalists.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecol Lett
                ele
                Ecology Letters
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd
                1461-023X
                1461-0248
                August 2009
                : 12
                : 8
                : 849-863
                Affiliations
                [1 ]simpleUnit “Ecobio”, University Rennes 1 CNRS, Campus Beaulieu, Bâtiment 14A, 35042 Rennes, France
                [2 ]simpleCentre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis, Department of Biology, University of Oslo PO BOX 1066, Blindern N-0316 Oslo, Norway
                Author notes

                Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Terms and Conditions set out at http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/authorresources/onlineopen.html

                Article
                10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01336.x
                2730552
                19580588
                25308a70-f1fd-4497-ba81-94c34c218693
                Journal compilation © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/CNRS

                Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.

                History
                : 28 January 2009
                : 10 March 2009
                : 11 May 2009
                Categories
                Reviews and Syntheses

                Ecology
                resource-use hypothesis,population decline,species lifetime,extinction and speciation,macroevolution,evolutionary dead-end,conservation biology,niche breadth,generalist-to-specialist,specialization-by-choice and specialization-by-constraint

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