Recent Sociocultural Changes Reverse the Long-Term Trend of Declining Habitat Availability for Large Wild Mammals in Europe

IF 4.6 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Diversity and Distributions Pub Date : 2024-10-24 DOI:10.1111/ddi.13921
Marco Davoli, Tobias Kuemmerle, Sophie Monsarrat, Jennifer Crees, Andrea Cristiano, Michela Pacifici, Jens-Christian Svenning
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Abstract

Aim

People have strongly influenced the biosphere for millennia, but how their increasing activities have shaped wildlife distribution is incompletely understood. We examined how the distribution of European large (>8 kg), wild mammals has changed in association with changing anthropogenic pressures and climate change through the Holocene.

Location

Europe.

Methods

We used over 17,000 zooarchaeological records of 20 species spanning 12,000 years to develop time-calibrated species distribution models, incorporating dynamic data on cropland extent, natural vegetation fragmentation, human population density and climate. We assessed habitat availability and potential species richness across time and within seven biogeographical regions. We also compared anthropogenic pressures at zooarchaeological record sites with present-day habitats of remaining large mammals to evaluate recent increases in their potential for coexistence with human activities.

Results

We found a continuous decline in potential large mammal species richness, particularly linked to changes in human population density. Most habitat loss became evident continentally after 1500 AD, but in the Atlantic and Mediterranean bioregions, habitat loss reached 20% during the Iron/Roman Ages (1000 BC–500 AD) due to increasing human population density. Climate change initially boosted species richness (+0.67 species/km2 on average) until the end of the Mesolithic but had negligible effects afterward. Today, large mammals appear to have a higher potential for coexisting with people compared to the past (e.g., herbivores today inhabit areas with a mean human population density of 95 people/km2, compared to an average of 17 people/km2 in the period 1500–2000 AD).

Main Conclusions

Our study emphasizes the crucial role of anthropogenic pressures over natural climate change in determining the distribution and diversity of large mammal communities throughout history. Additionally, our results indicate that contemporary anthropogenic trends like land-use de-intensification and stronger conservation policies can counteract the impact of past, higher anthropogenic pressures and reverse defaunation.

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最近的社会文化变化扭转了欧洲大型野生哺乳动物栖息地减少的长期趋势
几千年来,人类对生物圈产生了强烈的影响,但人们对人类日益增加的活动是如何影响野生动物分布的还不完全了解。我们研究了欧洲大型(> 8kg)野生哺乳动物的分布如何随着全新世的人为压力和气候变化而变化。位置 欧洲。方法利用1.2万年间20个物种的1.7万份动物考古记录,结合耕地面积、自然植被破碎化、人口密度和气候等动态数据,建立了基于时间校准的物种分布模型。我们评估了不同时间和7个生物地理区域内的栖息地可用性和潜在物种丰富度。我们还将动物考古记录遗址的人为压力与现存大型哺乳动物的栖息地进行了比较,以评估它们与人类活动共存的潜力最近的增加。结果发现潜在的大型哺乳动物物种丰富度持续下降,特别是与人口密度的变化有关。大部分栖息地的丧失在公元1500年之后在大陆上变得明显,但在大西洋和地中海生物区,由于人口密度的增加,在铁器/罗马时代(公元前1000年-公元500年),栖息地的丧失达到20%。在中石器时代结束之前,气候变化最初增加了物种丰富度(平均增加0.67个物种/km2),但之后的影响可以忽略不计。今天,与过去相比,大型哺乳动物似乎具有更高的与人类共存的潜力(例如,今天食草动物居住的地区平均人口密度为95人/平方公里,而公元1500-2000年期间平均为17人/平方公里)。我们的研究强调了人类活动对自然气候变化的影响在决定历史上大型哺乳动物群落的分布和多样性方面的关键作用。此外,我们的研究结果表明,当前的人为趋势,如土地利用去集约化和更强的保护政策,可以抵消过去的影响,更高的人为压力和逆转退化。
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来源期刊
Diversity and Distributions
Diversity and Distributions 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
195
审稿时长
8-16 weeks
期刊介绍: Diversity and Distributions is a journal of conservation biogeography. We publish papers that deal with the application of biogeographical principles, theories, and analyses (being those concerned with the distributional dynamics of taxa and assemblages) to problems concerning the conservation of biodiversity. We no longer consider papers the sole aim of which is to describe or analyze patterns of biodiversity or to elucidate processes that generate biodiversity.
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