Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Jézéquel Céline, Tedesco Pablo, Darwall W., Dias M. S., Frederico R. G., Hidalgo M., Hugueny Bernard, Maldonado-Ocampo J., Martens K., Ortega H., Torrente-Vilara G., Zuanon J., Oberdorff Thierry. (2020). Freshwater fish diversity hotspots for conservation priorities in the Amazon Basin. Conservation Biology, 34 (4), p. 956-965. ISSN 0888-8892.

Titre du document
Freshwater fish diversity hotspots for conservation priorities in the Amazon Basin
Année de publication
2020
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000557929900019
Auteurs
Jézéquel Céline, Tedesco Pablo, Darwall W., Dias M. S., Frederico R. G., Hidalgo M., Hugueny Bernard, Maldonado-Ocampo J., Martens K., Ortega H., Torrente-Vilara G., Zuanon J., Oberdorff Thierry
Source
Conservation Biology, 2020, 34 (4), p. 956-965 ISSN 0888-8892
Conserving freshwater habitats and their biodiversity in the Amazon Basin is a growing challenge in the face of rapid anthropogenic changes. We used the most comprehensive fish-occurrence database available (2355 valid species; 21,248 sampling points) and 3 ecological criteria (irreplaceability, representativeness, and vulnerability) to identify biodiversity hotspots based on 6 conservation templates (3 proactive, 1 reactive, 1 representative, and 1 balanced) to provide a set of alternative planning solutions for freshwater fish protection in the Amazon Basin. We identified empirically for each template the 17% of sub-basins that should be conserved and performed a prioritization analysis by identifying current and future (2050) threats (i.e., degree of deforestation and habitat fragmentation by dams). Two of our 3 proactive templates had around 65% of their surface covered by protected areas; high levels of irreplaceability (60% of endemics) and representativeness (71% of the Amazonian fish fauna); and low current and future vulnerability. These 2 templates, then, seemed more robust for conservation prioritization. The future of the selected sub-basins in these 2 proactive templates is not immediately threatened by human activities, and these sub-basins host the largest part of Amazonian biodiversity. They could easily be conserved if no additional threats occur between now and 2050.
Plan de classement
Limnologie biologique / Océanographie biologique [034] ; Ecologie, systèmes aquatiques [036]
Description Géographique
AMAZONE BASSIN ; BOLIVIE ; BRESIL ; COLOMBIE ; EQUATEUR ; GUYANA ; GUYANE ; PEROU ; SURINAME ; VENEZUELA
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010079514]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010079514
Contact