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Prevalence of sustainable and unsustainable use of wild species inferred from the IUCN Red List

Prevalence of sustainable and unsustainable use of wild species inferred from the IUCN Red List

来源:bioRxiv_logobioRxiv
英文摘要

Abstract Unsustainable exploitation of wild species represents a serious threat to biodiversity and to the livelihoods of local communities and indigenous peoples. However, managed, sustainable use has the potential to forestall extinctions, aid recovery, and meet human needs. Here, we infer current prevalence of unsustainable and sustainable biological resource use among species groups; research to date has focused on the former with little consideration of the latter. We analyzed species-level data for 30,923 species from 13 taxonomic groups comprehensively assessed on the IUCN Red List. Our results demonstrate the broad taxonomic prevalence of use, with 40% of species (10,098 of 25,009 from 10 taxonomic groups with adequate data) documented as being used. The main purposes of use are pets, display animals and horticulture, and human consumption. Use is often biologically unsustainable: intentional use is currently considered to be contributing to elevated extinction risk for more than one quarter of all threatened or Near Threatened (NT) species (2,752 – 2,848 of 9,753 species). Of the species used and traded, intentional use threatens 16% (1,597 – 1,631 of 10,098 species). However, 36% of species that are used (3,651 of 10,098 species) have either stable or improving population trends and do not have biological use documented as a threat, including 172 threatened or NT species. It is not yet inferable whether use of the remaining 48% of species is sustainable; we make suggestions for improving use-related Red List data to elucidate this. Around a third of species that have use documented as a threat are not currently receiving any species management actions that directly address this threat. Our findings on the prevalence of sustainable and unsustainable use, and variation across taxa, are important for informing international policymaking, including IPBES, the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. Article impact statementUse is likely unsustainable for 16%, likely sustainable for 36%, and undetermined for 48% of ~10,000 wild species analyzed on the Red List.

Lichtenstein Gabriela、Roe Dilys、Marsh Sophie M.E.、Hoffmann Michael、Burgess Neil D.、Brooks Thomas M.、Hilton-Taylor Craig、Cremona Patricia J.、B?hm Monika、de Micheaux Flore Lafaye、Challender Daniel W.S.

Instituto Nacional de Antropolog¨aa y Pensamiento Latinoamericano (INAPL)/CONICETInternational Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) and IUCN Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group (SULi)Centre for Biodiversity and Environment Research, Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College LondonConservation and Policy, Zoological Society of LondonUNEP-WCMC||CMEC, GLOBE Institute, University of CopenhagenInternational Union for Conservation of Nature||World Agroforestry Center (ICRAF), University of the Philippines||Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of TasmaniaInternational Union for Conservation of NatureInternational Union for Conservation of NatureInstitute of Zoology, Zoological Society of LondonInternational Union for Conservation of Nature||Institute of Geography and Sustainability, University of Lausanne||French Institute of PondicherryDepartment of Zoology, University of Oxford, Zoology Research

10.1101/2020.11.04.367763

生物科学现状、生物科学发展环境生物学环境管理

Policywildlife(un)sustainable useexploitationIPBESConvention on Biological DiversityCITESconservation action

Lichtenstein Gabriela,Roe Dilys,Marsh Sophie M.E.,Hoffmann Michael,Burgess Neil D.,Brooks Thomas M.,Hilton-Taylor Craig,Cremona Patricia J.,B?hm Monika,de Micheaux Flore Lafaye,Challender Daniel W.S..Prevalence of sustainable and unsustainable use of wild species inferred from the IUCN Red List[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-08-02].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.11.04.367763.点此复制

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