Contact

Robert K. Colwell

Museum Curator Adjoint in Entomology


Curriculum vitae


robertkcolwell [at] gmail.com


Museum of Natural History

University of Colorado

Boulder, CO 80309, USA




robertkcolwell [at] gmail.com


Museum of Natural History

University of Colorado

Boulder, CO 80309, USA



Coextinction and persistence of dependent species in a changing world


Journal article


R. K. Colwell, R. Dunn, Nyeema C. Harris
2012

Semantic Scholar DOI
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Colwell, R. K., Dunn, R., & Harris, N. C. (2012). Coextinction and persistence of dependent species in a changing world.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Colwell, R. K., R. Dunn, and Nyeema C. Harris. “Coextinction and Persistence of Dependent Species in a Changing World” (2012).


MLA   Click to copy
Colwell, R. K., et al. Coextinction and Persistence of Dependent Species in a Changing World. 2012.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{r2012a,
  title = {Coextinction and persistence of dependent species in a changing world},
  year = {2012},
  author = {Colwell, R. K. and Dunn, R. and Harris, Nyeema C.}
}

Abstract

The extinction of a single species is rarely an isolated event. Instead, dependent parasites, commensals, and mutualist partners (affiliates) face the risk of coextinction as their hosts or partners decline and fail. Species interactions in ecological networks can transmit the effects of primary extinctions within and between trophic levels, causing secondary extinctions and extinction cascades. Documenting coextinctions is complicated by ignorance of host specificity, limitations of historical collections, incomplete systematics of affiliate taxa, and lack of experimental studies. Host shifts may reduce the rate of coextinctions, but they are poorly understood. In the absence of better empirical records of coextinctions, statistical models estimate the rates of past and future coextinctions, and based on primary extinctions and interactions among species, network models explore extinction cascades. Models predict and historical evidence reveals that the threat of coextinction is influenced by both host a...


Share



Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in