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- ADW: Metatheria: INFORMATION
Metatherian mammals, also known as marsupials, comprise around 272 species They are an ancient group, very diverse in body form, and they occupy an enormous range of ecological niches Today, most marsupials are found in Central and South America (around 70 species) and Australasia (around 200 species)
- Millennial-scale faunal record reveals differential . . .
We therefore used the extensive data on past distributions of large mammal species available in the Holocene zooarchaeological record as a proxy for ecological monitoring data to reconstruct millennial-scale patterns of mammalian extinction across Europe, within a robust quantitative framework that controlled for bias inherent in such a dataset
- Global wildlife populations fall 69%, Australia records . . .
The World Wide Fund for Nature’s Living Planet Report 2022 reveals monitored global wildlife populations fell by 69%, on average, between 1970 and 2018, while some Australian populations have disappeared
- Expert guide to mammoths: all your questions answered
Discover key facts about the different species of mammoth – where they lived, what they ate, and why they went extinct
- 1 in 4 mammal and bird species are part of global trade. Here . . .
The researchers concluded that more than 8,000 wild species might eventually be included in the global wildlife trade market—3,000 more than are now
- Past and future decline and extinction of species | Royal Society
At this stage there is less complete knowledge of impacts on other species, but rapid appraisals have identified 191 invertebrate and 486 plant species as potentially severely affected 23 4 Loss of abundance The figure of 25% of all species threatened with extinction is one measure of a more general decline of populations of wild species
- Global Mammal Conservation: What Must We Manage? | Science
Here we conduct a global examination of mammal distributions to evaluate conservation priorities based on (i) range size distribution, (ii) global patterns of species richness, (ii) political endemism (i e , the proportion of species restricted to one country), (iv) the minimum area required to preserve one population or 10% of the range of
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