Body size, extinction risk and knowledge bias in New World snakes.

Extinction risk and body size have been found to be related in various vertebrate groups, with larger species being more at risk than smaller ones. We checked whether this was also the case for snakes by investigating extinction risk-body size relationships in the New World's Colubroidea specie...

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Main Authors: Bruno Vilela, Fabricio Villalobos, Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, Levi Carina Terribile
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4237443?pdf=render
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author Bruno Vilela
Fabricio Villalobos
Miguel Ángel Rodríguez
Levi Carina Terribile
author_facet Bruno Vilela
Fabricio Villalobos
Miguel Ángel Rodríguez
Levi Carina Terribile
author_sort Bruno Vilela
collection DOAJ
description Extinction risk and body size have been found to be related in various vertebrate groups, with larger species being more at risk than smaller ones. We checked whether this was also the case for snakes by investigating extinction risk-body size relationships in the New World's Colubroidea species. We used the IUCN Red List risk categories to assign each species to one of two broad levels of threat (Threatened and Non-Threatened) or to identify it as either Data Deficient or Not-Evaluated by the IUCN. We also included the year of description of each species in our analysis as this could affect the level of threat assigned to it (earlier described species had more time to gather information about them, which might have facilitated their evaluation). Also, species detectability could be a function of body size, with larger species tending to be described earlier, which could have an impact in extinction risk-body size relationships. We found a negative relationship between body size and description year, with large-bodied species being described earlier. Description year also varied among risk categories, with Non-Threatened species being described earlier than Threatened species and both species groups earlier than Data Deficient species. On average, Data Deficient species also presented smaller body sizes, while no size differences were detected between Threatened and Non-Threatened species. So it seems that smaller body sizes are related with species detectability, thus potentially affecting both when a species is described (smaller species tend to be described more recently) as well as the amount of information gathered about it (Data Deficient species tend to be smaller). Our data also indicated that if Data Deficient species were to be categorized as Threatened in the future, snake body size and extinction risk would be negatively related, contrasting with the opposite pattern commonly observed in other vertebrate groups.
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spelling doaj.art-82aa84aedaa54fa5b0806be395a707322022-12-21T17:48:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01911e11342910.1371/journal.pone.0113429Body size, extinction risk and knowledge bias in New World snakes.Bruno VilelaFabricio VillalobosMiguel Ángel RodríguezLevi Carina TerribileExtinction risk and body size have been found to be related in various vertebrate groups, with larger species being more at risk than smaller ones. We checked whether this was also the case for snakes by investigating extinction risk-body size relationships in the New World's Colubroidea species. We used the IUCN Red List risk categories to assign each species to one of two broad levels of threat (Threatened and Non-Threatened) or to identify it as either Data Deficient or Not-Evaluated by the IUCN. We also included the year of description of each species in our analysis as this could affect the level of threat assigned to it (earlier described species had more time to gather information about them, which might have facilitated their evaluation). Also, species detectability could be a function of body size, with larger species tending to be described earlier, which could have an impact in extinction risk-body size relationships. We found a negative relationship between body size and description year, with large-bodied species being described earlier. Description year also varied among risk categories, with Non-Threatened species being described earlier than Threatened species and both species groups earlier than Data Deficient species. On average, Data Deficient species also presented smaller body sizes, while no size differences were detected between Threatened and Non-Threatened species. So it seems that smaller body sizes are related with species detectability, thus potentially affecting both when a species is described (smaller species tend to be described more recently) as well as the amount of information gathered about it (Data Deficient species tend to be smaller). Our data also indicated that if Data Deficient species were to be categorized as Threatened in the future, snake body size and extinction risk would be negatively related, contrasting with the opposite pattern commonly observed in other vertebrate groups.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4237443?pdf=render
spellingShingle Bruno Vilela
Fabricio Villalobos
Miguel Ángel Rodríguez
Levi Carina Terribile
Body size, extinction risk and knowledge bias in New World snakes.
PLoS ONE
title Body size, extinction risk and knowledge bias in New World snakes.
title_full Body size, extinction risk and knowledge bias in New World snakes.
title_fullStr Body size, extinction risk and knowledge bias in New World snakes.
title_full_unstemmed Body size, extinction risk and knowledge bias in New World snakes.
title_short Body size, extinction risk and knowledge bias in New World snakes.
title_sort body size extinction risk and knowledge bias in new world snakes
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4237443?pdf=render
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AT miguelangelrodriguez bodysizeextinctionriskandknowledgebiasinnewworldsnakes
AT levicarinaterribile bodysizeextinctionriskandknowledgebiasinnewworldsnakes