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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Parasite biodiversity faces extinction and redistribution in a changing climate

TLDR
The most comprehensive spatially explicit data set available for parasites, projected range shifts in a changing climate, and estimated extinction rates for eight major parasite clades is compiled, finding that ectoparasites (especially ticks) fare disproportionately worse than endopar asites.
Abstract
Climate change is a well-documented driver of both wildlife extinction and disease emergence, but the negative impacts of climate change on parasite diversity are undocumented. We compiled the most comprehensive spatially explicit data set available for parasites, projected range shifts in a changing climate, and estimated extinction rates for eight major parasite clades. On the basis of 53,133 occurrences capturing the geographic ranges of 457 parasite species, conservative model projections suggest that 5 to 10% of these species are committed to extinction by 2070 from climate-driven habitat loss alone. We find no evidence that parasites with zoonotic potential have a significantly higher potential to gain range in a changing climate, but we do find that ectoparasites (especially ticks) fare disproportionately worse than endoparasites. Accounting for host-driven coextinctions, models predict that up to 30% of parasitic worms are committed to extinction, driven by a combination of direct and indirect pressures. Despite high local extinction rates, parasite richness could still increase by an order of magnitude in some places, because species successfully tracking climate change invade temperate ecosystems and replace native species with unpredictable ecological consequences.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparing methods for mapping global parasite diversity

TL;DR: The type of model used to infer parasite distributions affects estimates of both total species richness and spatial patterns of hotspots of parasite richness, and the non‐saturated species accumulation curves even for the best studied regions of the world serve as a call for further sampling effort and development of effective analytic tools that can provide robust accounts of global parasite diversity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parasite Collections: Overlooked Resources for Integrative Research and Conservation.

TL;DR: Promoting and supporting parasite collections will ensure their ongoing stability and accessibility, and should be cultivated to advance organismal-based science.
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Incorporating coextinction in threat assessments and policy will rapidly improve the accuracy of threatened species lists

TL;DR: This work proposes including the degree of host specificity of a dependent invertebrate species to threatened host species as an additional correlate of extinction proneness, where there is a continuum from generalist dependents to dependents that are completely specialized to use a single host species per life stage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Host biology and environmental variables differentially predict flea abundances for two rodent hosts in a plague-relevant system.

TL;DR: In insight into factors affecting flea abundance on two chipmunk species, which may be linked to changing climate and possible future plague epizootics, constructed models to identify environmental predictors offlea abundance for the two most common flea species.
References
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Model Selection and Multimodel Inference: A Practical Information-Theoretic Approach

TL;DR: The second edition of this book is unique in that it focuses on methods for making formal statistical inference from all the models in an a priori set (Multi-Model Inference).
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Biodiversity hotspots for conservation priorities

TL;DR: A ‘silver bullet’ strategy on the part of conservation planners, focusing on ‘biodiversity hotspots’ where exceptional concentrations of endemic species are undergoing exceptional loss of habitat, is proposed.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed interpolated climate surfaces for global land areas (excluding Antarctica) at a spatial resolution of 30 arc s (often referred to as 1-km spatial resolution).
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Maximum entropy modeling of species geographic distributions

TL;DR: In this paper, the use of the maximum entropy method (Maxent) for modeling species geographic distributions with presence-only data was introduced, which is a general-purpose machine learning method with a simple and precise mathematical formulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A globally coherent fingerprint of climate change impacts across natural systems

TL;DR: A diagnostic fingerprint of temporal and spatial ‘sign-switching’ responses uniquely predicted by twentieth century climate trends is defined and generates ‘very high confidence’ (as laid down by the IPCC) that climate change is already affecting living systems.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
How do climate change and global warming affect the worm population?

The paper does not specifically mention the impact of climate change and global warming on the worm population. The paper focuses on the overall impact of climate change on parasite biodiversity, including parasitic worms.