Authors
William J Ripple, Christopher Wolf, Thomas M Newsome, Matthew G Betts, Gerardo Ceballos, Franck Courchamp, Matt W Hayward, Blaire Van Valkenburgh, Arian D Wallach, Boris Worm
Publication date
2019/5
Journal
Conservation Letters
Volume
12
Issue
3
Pages
e12627
Description
Many of the world's vertebrates have experienced large population and geographic range declines due to anthropogenic threats that put them at risk of extinction. The largest vertebrates, defined as megafauna, are especially vulnerable. We analyzed how human activities are impacting the conservation status of megafauna within six classes: mammals, ray‐finned fish, cartilaginous fish, amphibians, birds, and reptiles. We identified a total of 362 extant megafauna species. We found that 70% of megafauna species with sufficient information are decreasing and 59% are threatened with extinction. Surprisingly, direct harvesting of megafauna for human consumption of meat or body parts is the largest individual threat to each of the classes examined, and a threat for 98% (159/162) of threatened species with threat data available. Therefore, minimizing the direct killing of the world's largest vertebrates is a priority …
Scholar articles
WJ Ripple, C Wolf, TM Newsome, MG Betts… - Conservation Letters, 2019