AG百家乐大转轮-AG百家乐导航_怎么看百家乐走势_全讯网官网 (中国)·官方网站

Research News

【Los Angeles Times】Study: Animal, plant extinction rates may be overestimated

Methods of calculating losses flawed, researchers say

Posted May 19, 2011, 12:55 pm

Global Post

A controversial study suggests that current extinction rate projections of animal and plant species may be overestimating the role of habitat loss. But researchers said that species extinction still remains a “real and growing" threat.

Current methods of estimating extinction rates are flawed, using the wrong kind of data, and fail to take into account the full complexity of what influences species loss, researchers found.

The study, published in the journal Nature, said that present figures overestimated rates by up to 160 percent, and called for more accurate calculations. Animals and plants are dying out about 2.5 times more slowly than previously thought, according to the study’s authors, Stephen Hubbell from the University of California, Los Angeles, and Fangliang He from Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou,

China, who is currently on sabbatical from Canada's University of Alberta.

The study notes that several predictions, including one that predicted half of all species would be gone by the year 2000, "have not been observed."

"The most widely used indirect method is to estimate extinction rates by reversing the species-area accumulation curve, extrapolating backwards to smaller areas to calculate expected species loss," the researchers wrote. "Estimates based on this method are almost always much higher than actually observed."

"The area that must be added to find individual of a species is, in general, much smaller than the area that must be removed to eliminate the last individual of a species," the professors observed. "Therefore, on average, it takes a much greater loss of area to cause the extinction of a species."

Still a very real threat

But Hubbell and He also wrote that habitat loss was still the main threat to biodiversity, and that the study must not "lead to complacency about extinction (as a result of) habitat loss," which was a "real and growing concern,” the BBC reports.

The study has been criticized by some prominent ecologists, who expressed concerns about the paper’s sweeping conclusions, The New York Times reports.

Stuart Pimm, a conservation biologist at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, called the study "total nonsense" and told Postmedia News that Hubbell and He have misrepresented his work on species loss in North America's eastern forest.

Jean Christophe Vie, species program deputy director for the International Union for Conservation of Nature — which publishes the authoritative Red List of Threatened Species — said that while it is important to “get the science right,” he was concerned about how the study could be interpreted.

"I am quite worried about how this report could be used by people who are reluctant to take environmental issues seriously," he told the BBC.

百家乐官网赌局| 风水中的24山图| 百家乐官网试玩| 司法| 24楼层风水好吗| 泸西县| 大发888客服咨询电话| 百家乐怎么刷反水| 百家乐官网庄闲对冲| 百家乐怎么玩| 大发888娱乐城客服lm0| 百家乐娱乐网开户| 网络百家乐路单图| 百家乐官网统计| 娱网棋牌大厅| 大发888下载安装包| 百家乐破解分| 波音百家乐官网现金网| 爱博娱乐| 福布斯百家乐的玩法技巧和规则 | 百家乐官网娱乐天上人间| 太阳城亚洲| 足球即时比分网| 3D乐财网| 大发游戏| 在线扎金花| 赌博堕天录漫画| 长宁区| 百家乐官网娱乐城彩金| 宜昌市| 九州百家乐官网娱乐城| 百家乐平注法到6| tt百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 博乐百家乐游戏| 百家乐视频双扣下载| 现金百家乐人气最高| 博E百百家乐现金网| 百家乐最新的投注方法| 百家乐龙虎玩| 赌球网址| 足球心水论坛|