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Saturday, 16 July 2016
Assessing the importance of multiple threats to an endangered globose cactus in Mexico: Cattle grazing, looting and climate change
Published Date
January 2015, Vol.181:73–81, doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2014.10.035
Title
Assessing the importance of multiple threats to an endangered globose cactus in Mexico: Cattle grazing, looting and climate change
Author
Carlos Martorell a,,
Delfín M. Montañana a
Carolina Ureta b,
María C. Mandujano c,
aDepartamento de Ecología y Recursos Naturales, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, 04510 México, D.F., Mexico
bDepartamento de Zoología, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, 04510 México, D.F., Mexico
cInstituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, 04510 México, D.F., Mexico
Received 29 January 2014. Revised 15 October 2014. Accepted 21 October 2014. Available online 28 November 2014.
Abstract
Cacti are a priority for conservation because their slow recovery rates and high habitat specificity make their populations particularly susceptible to looters who raid their populations, anthropogenic disturbance and climate change (CC). Identifying the most damaging threat is critical to the direction and efficiency of conservation efforts. We analyzed the impacts of looting, disturbance and CC on the geographically rare globose cactusCoryphantha werdermanniiin Coahuila, Northern Mexico. We collected evidence on looting and estimated the impacts of seed and adult plant extraction through demographic models. We compared 10 sites differing in disturbance intensity and analyzed the effect on plant density, size structure and reproduction. The potential distribution ofC.werdermanniiunder current conditions and future CC was assessed through ecological niche modeling. We found that looting is mostly confined to seeds, which have little impact on population growth and therefore not responsible for population decline. As in many globose cacti, the density ofC.werdermanniipopulations increased with disturbance, likely because cattle grazing increases recruitment rates. Contrastingly, even the most optimistic CC scenarios suggest a 90% reduction in the potential distribution area by 2050, indicating thatC.werdermanniiis an endangered species most threatened by CC. We suggest that relocation programs and the maintenance of livestock levels appropriate for this species (moderate-high) may effectively counteract or delay the effects of CC. Our results suggest that current efforts are devoted to relatively minor threats, while CC is neglected, and highlight the importance of formal assessments of multiple threats.
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