A global map of species at risk of extinction due to natural hazards
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An often-overlooked question of the biodiversity crisis is how natural hazards contribute to species extinction risk. To address this issue, we explored how four natural hazards: earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis, and volcanoes, overlapped with the distribution ranges of amphibians, birds, mammals, and reptiles that have either narrow distributions or populations with few mature individuals. To assess which species are at risk from these natural hazards, we combined the frequency and magnitude of each natural hazard to estimate a probability of impact. We considered species at risk if they overlapped with regions where any of the four natural hazards historically occurred (n = 3,722). Those species with at least a quarter of their range subjected to a high probability of impact were considered at high risk (n = 2,001) of extinction due to natural hazards. In total, 834 reptiles, 617 amphibians, 302 birds, and 248 mammals were at high risk and they were mainly distributed on islands and ..., To address this knowledge gap, we provide an evaluation of the risk posed by natural hazards to terrestrial vertebrate species worldwide, focusing especially on those species that have limited distributions and/or occur at low numbers. First, we selected all amphibian, bird, mammal, and reptile species with a maximum population size of 1,100 mature individuals and/or those with a range size less than or equal to 2,500 km² based on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Second, we constructed an estimate for the likelihood of impact from four natural hazards (earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis, and volcanoes) by analysing approximately 50 years of historical data concerning the frequency and magnitude of events. We then identified all species whose ranges overlap with known occurrences of hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanoes. Finally, we classified the species at âhigh-riskâ as those for which at least a quarter of their range overlapped with areas of high probability of imp..., , # A global map of species at risk of extinction due to natural hazards
[https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m0cfxpp8s](https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m0cfxpp8s)
To account for potential errors of commission and omission in the IUCN range maps, we tested two approaches: (1) estimating the percentage of the ranges intersecting with each cell (Datasets S1-S4). Then we conducted binary pixel-based analyses, using the entire cell area is a species range intersected it (Datasets S5-S20).
*Dataset S1: Information about reptile species at risk and high risk due to natural hazards.*
*Dataset S2: Information about amphibian species at risk and high risk due to natural*
*hazards.*
*Dataset S3: Information about bird species at risk and high risk due to natural hazards.*
*Dataset S4: Information about mammal species at risk and high risk due to natural*
*hazards.*
*Dataset S5: Information about reptile species at risk and high risk due to earthquakes*
*calculated using six different transformati...
创建时间:
2025-08-01



