Biogeography of extinction: The demise of insular mammals from the Late Pleistocene till today

Extinction, speciation and immigration are the main factors shaping patterns of biodiversity on islands. In particular, the impact of the Late Pleistocene-Holocene extinction wave had a strong impact on the megafauna. Here we investigate the relationship between extinctions of insular endemic mammal...

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Published inPalaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology Vol. 505; pp. 295 - 304
Main Authors Kouvari, Miranta, van der Geer, Alexandra A.E.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 15.09.2018
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Summary:Extinction, speciation and immigration are the main factors shaping patterns of biodiversity on islands. In particular, the impact of the Late Pleistocene-Holocene extinction wave had a strong impact on the megafauna. Here we investigate the relationship between extinctions of insular endemic mammal species and their body mass, the size of the island and the first human arrival to the archipelago. Our data on islands worldwide show that megafauna was hit hard indeed. All islands lost their heaviest mammal species, whereas maximum surviving mammalian body size differs per archipelago, ranging from heavier than 100 kg (Philippines) to below 100 g (Canaries) and no surviving native mammals on the Galápagos. Although the number of extinctions is highest on larger islands, in line with predictions following from the species-area relationship, the percentage in relation to total number of endemic species is the lowest. Major part (almost 80%) of extinctions of insular endemics took place after the first human arrival, with the highest percentages during the Late Pleistocene (34.5%) and the Modern Era (31%). This indicates an increased rate of extinctions in the Modern Era, considering the substantially longer time span of the former period. Increased globalisation with introductions of alien species in combination with substantial anthropogenic habitat alteration likely underlies this pattern. Whether these extinction waves follow a fast or slow scenario (“blitzkrieg” versus “sitzkrieg”) remains unclear, but the gradual increase in extinctions through the Holocene, with a peak (31%) in the last 500 years, is suggestive of a slow scenario. •All Late Pleistocene islands lost their heaviest endemic mammal species.•Smaller-sized species were decimated as well in Madagascar, the West Indies and the Mediterranean.•Extinction rate of endemic island mammals is related to island area.•Mammal extinctions on islands often coincide with the first human arrival to the island group.•The effect of human arrival is mediated by both island size and body mass.
ISSN:0031-0182
1872-616X
DOI:10.1016/j.palaeo.2018.06.008