LIVIVO - The Search Portal for Life Sciences

zur deutschen Oberfläche wechseln
Advanced search

Search results

Result 1 - 3 of total 3

Search options

  1. Article ; Online: The Wallacean Shortfall and the role of historical distribution records in the conservation assessment of an elusive Neotropical snake in a threatened landscape

    Serrano, Filipe C. / Vieira-Alencar, João Paulo dos Santos / Díaz-Ricaurte, Juan C. / Valdujo, Paula H. / Martins, Marcio / Nogueira, Cristiano de Campos

    Journal for Nature Conservation. 2023 Apr., v. 72 p.126350-

    2023  

    Abstract: Documenting species distribution is essential to extinction risk asessments and subsequent conservation actions. Historical records are thus essential to understand how species are distributed and how their range has changed over time. However, using ... ...

    Abstract Documenting species distribution is essential to extinction risk asessments and subsequent conservation actions. Historical records are thus essential to understand how species are distributed and how their range has changed over time. However, using historical records might contribute to overestimating the species current range and misrepresent their conservation status. Here, we illustrate the pitfalls of this approach using a widespread but elusive Neotropical snake species, Philodryas livida (Dipsadidae Bonaparte, 1838). We mapped occurrences of this species over time and calculated its Extent of Occurrence and Area of Habitat. Our results show that due to the intense, widespread anthropic land-use transformation since the discovery of P. livida in 1920, most historical localities are now likely unsuitable for its occurrence and both its current Extent of Occurrence and Area of Habitat become remarkably smaller (5.7% and 19.1% remaining, respectively) if only localities from the last 30 years are considered. Apart from the natural elusiveness of the species, intense habitat loss and fragmentation may also explain the low number of recent records of P. livida, all concentrated within or near protected areas, indicating a putative decline in range relevant to its conservation status. We thus highlight how failing to consider the date of records and the associated land-use change over time might underestimate species range reduction and thus threat status. We strongly encourage the inclusion of the date of each occurrence record in conservation assessments, as suggested by the IUCN’s mapping standards, such that historical records are carefully considered, especially in highly dynamic and threatened biomes such as the Cerrado savannas in Brazil.
    Keywords Dipsadidae ; Neotropics ; cerrado ; conservation status ; decline ; extinction ; geographical distribution ; habitat destruction ; habitats ; land use change ; landscapes ; risk ; snakes ; Brazil ; Area of Habitat ; Extent of occurrence ; IUCN ; Land-use ; Rarity ; Threatened species
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2023-04
    Publishing place Elsevier GmbH
    Document type Article ; Online
    ZDB-ID 2077553-2
    ISSN 1618-1093 ; 1617-1381
    ISSN (online) 1618-1093
    ISSN 1617-1381
    DOI 10.1016/j.jnc.2023.126350
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

    More links

    Kategorien

  2. Article ; Online: How habitat loss and fragmentation are reducing conservation opportunities for vertebrates in the most threatened savanna of the World

    Vieira-Alencar, João Paulo S. / Bolochio, Bruna E. / Carmignotto, Ana Paula / Sawaya, Ricardo J. / Silveira, Luís Fábio / Valdujo, Paula Hanna / Nogueira, Cristiano de Campos / Nori, Javier

    Associação Brasileira de Ciência Ecológica e Conservação Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation. 2023 Mar. 30,

    2023  

    Abstract: Effective, resilient and strategic protected area networks are essential to protect biodiversity and human welfare, especially in vulnerable biodiversity hotspots. This is the case in the Brazilian Cerrado, the richest tropical savanna, and a ... ...

    Abstract Effective, resilient and strategic protected area networks are essential to protect biodiversity and human welfare, especially in vulnerable biodiversity hotspots. This is the case in the Brazilian Cerrado, the richest tropical savanna, and a deforestation front worldwide. Worryingly, the rate of habitat conversion in Cerrado greatly reduces opportunities to conserve its biodiversity. Herein, using the most comprehensive database on the distribution of Cerrado endemic terrestrial vertebrates, we mapped conservation priority areas and evaluated how and to what extent habitat loss and fragmentation reduce conservation opportunities. Priority areas are scattered throughout the Cerrado. Larger priority areas are concentrated in the northern portion of the region. Southern priority areas are small, scattered, and isolated. During the last 35 years, opportunities to conserve large contiguous areas have significantly decreased, hampering the representation of key endemic species. However, as most endemic vertebrates are small ranged, modest but well located increments in total protected area will result in significant overall improvements in the PA system. Protecting the largest priority areas identified here is urgent and mandatory, while using habitat restoration as a key activity to promote connectivity among smaller priority areas, especially in the southern portion of this hotspot.
    Keywords biodiversity ; cerrado ; conservation areas ; databases ; deforestation ; habitat conservation ; habitat destruction ; habitats ; indigenous species ; savannas ; social welfare ; Cerrado biodiversity hotspot ; Conservation planning ; Deforestation hotspots ; Endemism ; Habitat fragmentation ; Terrestrial vertebrates
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2023-0330
    Publishing place Elsevier B.V.
    Document type Article ; Online
    Note Pre-press version ; Use and reproduction
    ISSN 2530-0644
    DOI 10.1016/j.pecon.2023.02.004
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

    More links

    Kategorien

  3. Article: Mapping local and regional distribution of Lygophis paucidens Hoge, 1952 (Serpentes, Dipsadidae), an elusive snake from the sandy savannas of Brazil and Paraguay

    Serrano, Filipe Alexandre Cabreirinha / Vieira-Alencar, João Paulo dos Santos / Diaz-Ricaurte, Juan Camilo / Nogueira, Cristiano de Campos

    Check list. 2020 Jan. 24, v. 16, no. 1

    2020  

    Abstract: Lygophis paucidens Hoge, 1952 is a rare Neotropical snake, previously mapped using only a few individuals in five localities. Herein we update and discuss the distribution and conservation status of L. paucidens within major Neotropical ecoregions, ... ...

    Abstract Lygophis paucidens Hoge, 1952 is a rare Neotropical snake, previously mapped using only a few individuals in five localities. Herein we update and discuss the distribution and conservation status of L. paucidens within major Neotropical ecoregions, providing previously unavailable data on distribution and habitat use. We compiled and mapped point locality records from literature and museum specimens, complemented by field studies in three localities. We used those records to map the species Extent of Occurrence (EOO) and Area of Occupancy (AOO), two range-related metrics of central relevance for conservation. We recovered 52 records from 46 vouchered specimens and six field records, distributed in 35 individual point localities, all within the diagonal of open vegetation in South America, with most records in cerrado savannas with sandy soils. Lygophis paucidens is likely a psammophilous species, which might explain its occurrence in savanna enclaves in forested ecoregions and its potentially discontinuous distribution. This knowledge is, therefore, useful in aiding future conservation assessments.
    Keywords Dipsadidae ; Neotropics ; cerrado ; conservation status ; habitat preferences ; museums ; savannas ; snakes ; Brazil ; Paraguay
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2020-0124
    Size p. 75-81.
    Publishing place Pensoft Publishers
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2252867-2
    ISSN 1809-127X
    ISSN 1809-127X
    DOI 10.15560/16.1.75
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

    More links

    Kategorien

To top