By Chelsea Harvey, The Washington Post, October 7, 2015
While
there’s been extensive research attempting to predict the future of
Earth’s vulnerable plants and animals, there have been comparatively few
studies investigating the extinctions that have occurred in the past.
Looking
backward is an important method of understanding how extinction rates
have changed over time, the environmental factors that have influenced
them and how seriously they have affected Earth’s ecosystems. Now, a
researcher from Macquarie University in Australia has published a study examining
recent extinctions within two vulnerable groups of animals — reptiles
and amphibians — and the results are cause for alarm. Most notably, they
indicate that approximately 200 frog species have already gone extinct,
and hundreds more may be on their way out.
John Alroy,
a professor of biological sciences at Macquarie University and the
paper’s author, said he was inspired to conduct the study when a
journalist asked him what scientists know about the number of species
that have already gone extinct. “I looked for a paper where they do
this, and I didn’t find one,” Alroy said.
So
he decided to analyze a large taxonomic group and settled on reptiles
and amphibians — partly because there was a large amount of global data
available for these groups, and partly because of a growing concern in
the scientific community over the health of frog populations, which are
thought to be in a state of decline in many places. “There was a very
strong indication that I would get some frog extinctions,” Alroy said.
And
he did. Using a statistical method known as a Bayesian approach, Alroy
estimated the probability of past extinctions for certain types of
amphibians and reptiles, including frogs, salamanders, snakes and
lizards, using museum collections and published documents to figure out
when an animal was last sighted. He found that frogs seemed to be the
most vulnerable to extinction — the results suggested that more than
3 percent of all frog species have disappeared, largely since the 1970s.
The
method “suggests that about 200 frog extinctions have occurred and
hundreds more will be lost over the next century, so we are on pace to
create a mass extinction,” the study states.
This
is a worrisome finding, especially since Alroy describes his method as
highly conservative, meaning it’s likely to underestimate the number of
extinctions that have actually taken place. And the results also predict
that if these extinction rates keep up, nearly 7 percent of frogs could
be lost in the next century. “Thus, the data suggest that a runaway
train of extinction is now likely to produce what would be seen as a
global mass extinction on the ultimately more important landscape of
geological time,” Alroy writes in the paper.
To
put those numbers in context, the data suggest that extinction rates
for reptiles and amphibians are about 10,000 times larger than the rates
for all other organisms.
In
general, though, other types of amphibians and reptiles experienced
lower extinction rates than frogs. “I found a much smaller proportional
number of extinctions for snakes and lizards — half as much, nominally,”
Alroy said. “The message there is that snakes and lizards are much more
robust to various environmental pressures.”
These
results weren’t necessarily surprising, since scientists are already
aware that frogs are a particularly vulnerable group. “They’re seen as a
‘canary in the coal mine’ group because they seem to suffer large
population losses more easily than other groups,” Alroy said. “What was
surprising was the geographic pattern of frog extinctions.”
In
addition to large losses in Central America, Alroy also noted
extinctions in Brazil, Madagascar and New Guinea — “places where there
are not well-documented population losses due to anything,” Alroy said.
“I think there are mass extinctions happening in the tropics that are
largely undocumented.”
It’s
unclear what’s been causing these extinctions, which seem to have
accelerated in the past several decades. A variety of factors could be
at play, including habitat destruction and the devastating effects of a
deadly fungus called Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis. And there wasn’t a
clear pattern between environmental pressures and extinctions. For
instance, some places with high rates of extinction were also known
hotspots for the fungus, while others had no documentation of the fungus
ever being present.
And
that might be one of the most concerning points of all, since it means
scientists still don’t have a clear idea of what’s killing off all the
frogs. “Honest to goodness, I don’t know what’s going on,” Alroy said.
“The pattern seems to be that there are more extinctions in the wet
tropics, speaking very loosely, which is not too surprising because
that’s where all the biodiversity is. But that doesn’t really answer the
question of what’s going on.”
Future
research should include more field work in order to figure out the
environmental pressures that are causing extinctions in different
locations, Alroy said. Then scientists might be able to start taking
action to cut down on the losses.
Alroy
notes that when conducting such research in the future, it’s important
for scientists to look at the broad range of environmental factors that
might be affecting an animal. “There’s a tendency in the literature to
focus very strongly on the potential future impacts of climate change,
specifically,” Alroy said. And while climate change is likely to be an
important factor in the coming years “this paper suggests that in the
absence of really severe climate change we’ve already seen the beginning
of a major mass extinction.”
“I’m
not saying we should stop looking at climate change,” he added. “I’m
saying there should be additional focus on other causal factors like
habitat destruction and invasive species in particular. So I’m hoping
this paper will encourage more research of that kind.”
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