Abstract

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List classifies species according to their risk of extinction, informing local to global conservation decisions. Here we look to advance the estimation of generation length, which is used as a time-scalar in the Red List as a way of accounting for differences in species’ life-histories. We calculated or predicted generation length for 86 species of antelope following the Rspan approach. We also tested the importance of both allometry (body-mass) and phylogeny (phylogenetic eigenvectors) as predictors of generation length within a Phylogenetic Eigenvector Map (PEM) framework. We then evaluated the predictive power of this PEM and two binning approaches, following a leave-one-out cross-validation routine. We showed that captive and wild longevity data are nonequivalent and that both body-mass and phylogeny are important predictors for generation length (body-mass explained 64% and phylogeny 36% of the partitioned explained variance). Plus, both the PEM, and the binning approach that included both taxonomic rank and body-mass, had good predictive power and therefore are suitable for extrapolating generation length to missing-data species. Therefore, based on our findings, we advise separating captive and wild data when estimating generation length, and considering the implications of wild and captive data more widely in life-history analyses. We also recommend that body-mass and phylogeny should be used in combination, preferably under a PEM framework (as it was less reliant on available reference species and more explicitly accounts for phylogenetic relatedness) or a binning approach if a PEM is not feasible, to extrapolate generation length to missing-data species. Overall, we provide a transparent, consistent and transferable workflow for improving the use of the Rspan method to calculate generation length for the IUCN Red List.

Highlights

  • Understanding species’ vulnerability to extinction, in order to mitigate impacts and prevent the loss of biodiversity, is a major goal of conservation biology [1]

  • Through an established assessment process, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) protocol classifies species into different categories of risk using a formal set of five criteria supported by quantitative thresholds [6]

  • We focused on 86 extant Bovidae species from 34 genera that fall within the IUCN SSC Antelope Specialist Group’s remit

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding species’ vulnerability to extinction, in order to mitigate impacts and prevent the loss of biodiversity, is a major goal of conservation biology [1]. The Red List has been implemented in scientific, political and popular contexts as a means of highlighting the world’s most threatened species and directing conservation actions [4], with over 85,000 species assessed; as well as for reporting on biodiversity trends through the Red List Index [5]. Whilst efforts are made to validate assessments through a rigorous review process, inaccuracies can confound reporting against international targets, such as the Aichi 2020 biodiversity targets set by the Convention on Biological Diversity, as well as misdirecting scarce conservation funding [7]

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