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February 13, 2025

Protected habitats aren't enough to save endangered species: Models show species are impacted by far-off threats

Camera-trap image of a leopard chasing a porcupine in The Udzungwa mountains of Tanzania. Credit: Rasmus Havmøller and Francesco Rovero (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
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Camera-trap image of a leopard chasing a porcupine in The Udzungwa mountains of Tanzania. Credit: Rasmus Havmøller and Francesco Rovero (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

In tropical forests, endangered species inside protected habitats are still in danger from threats from beyond their sanctuaries, according to a study published in the open-access journal by Ilaria Greco and Francesco Rovero of the University of Florence, Italy, and colleagues.

Tropical forests contain the majority of Earth's biodiversity, but they are also home to high concentrations of threatened species.

Worldwide, governments are committing to establishing more protected wildlife areas through initiatives like the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, but there is evidence to suggest that species within such protected areas might still be impacted by threats outside these borders.

In this study, Greco and colleagues assess how mammalian communities are impacted by wide-ranging anthropogenic impacts.

The researchers collected data from nearly 560,000 camera-trap images of 239 mammal species in in Asia, Africa, and the Americas.

In each area, they measured the richness and distribution of the mammalian community and tested how those metrics responded to and disturbance in surrounding areas.

Human population density had a strong effect on the number of in an area. Even with the wildlife restricted within a protected area and the human population outside, the study's model predicts a 1% decline in for every 16 persons per square kilometer in the surrounding landscape. Mammal communities were also negatively impacted by forest loss and fragmentation within 50 kilometers of their forest homes.

Camera-trap image of yawning black panther (melanic Panthera pardus). Credit: TEAM Network (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
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Camera-trap image of yawning black panther (melanic Panthera pardus). Credit: TEAM Network (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Camera-trap image of curious mountain gorillas. Credit: TEAM Network (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
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Camera-trap image of curious mountain gorillas. Credit: TEAM Network (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

These results show that communities within a protected habitat can still be negatively impacted by anthropogenic disturbances in the wider surrounding landscape. The authors suggest that establishing protected areas alone is not sufficient to conserve wildlife, and that these efforts can be complemented with broader measures such as preventing wide-scale forest loss and restoring habitat connectivity across the landscape.

"Our results," says Greco, "suggest the existence of anthropogenic extinction filtering acting on mammals in tropical forests, whereby human overpopulation has driven the most sensitive species to local extinction while remaining ones are able to persist, or even thrive, in highly populated landscapes and mainly depend on habitat cover."

"The study warns that conservation of many mammals in tropical forests depends on mitigating the complex detrimental effects of anthropogenic pressures well beyond protected area borders," adds Rovero.

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More information: Greco I et al. Landscape-level human disturbance results in loss and contraction of mammalian populations in tropical forests. PLOS Biology (2025).

Journal information: PLoS Biology

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Endangered species in tropical forests face threats from outside protected habitats. Despite efforts to establish more protected areas, species within these zones are still affected by external anthropogenic pressures. Data from camera traps in tropical forests show that human population density and habitat disturbance in surrounding areas significantly reduce species richness. Effective conservation requires broader measures beyond establishing protected areas, such as preventing forest loss and enhancing habitat connectivity.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.