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Global Study Finds Recorded Extinctions Peaked About a Century Ago, Not Accelerating

The authors say past island losses driven by invasive species offer poor guidance for today’s habitat-driven risks.

Overview

  • University of Arizona researchers Kristen Saban and John Wiens analyzed records spanning nearly 2 million species and 912 documented extinctions over the past 500 years.
  • The paper in Proceedings of the Royal Society B reports declines in extinction rates for plants, arthropods, and land vertebrates since the early 20th century.
  • Historical losses were concentrated among mollusks and vertebrates on islands, while current IUCN assessments show most at-risk species are mainland species confronting habitat destruction.
  • The analysis found no evidence that climate change has increased extinctions in recent centuries, though the researchers warn it remains a looming threat.
  • The study credits conservation efforts with helping slow losses in some groups and cautions that extrapolating past patterns can misstate current and future risks.