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Research article2016Peer reviewedOpen access

Bushmeat hunting and extinction risk to the world's mammals

Ripple, William J.; Chapron, Guillaume; Young, Hillary

Abstract

Terrestrial mammals are experiencing a massive collapse in their population sizes and geographical ranges around the world, but many of the drivers, patterns and consequences of this decline remain poorly understood. Here we provide an analysis showing that bushmeat hunting for mostly food and medicinal products is driving a global crisis whereby 301 terrestrial mammal species are threatened with extinction. Nearly all of these threatened species occur in developing countries where major coexisting threats include deforestation, agricultural expansion, human encroachment and competition with livestock. The unrelenting decline of mammals suggests many vital ecological and socio-economic services that these species provide will be lost, potentially changing ecosystems irrevocably. We discuss options and current obstacles to achieving effective conservation, alongside consequences of failure to stem such anthropogenic mammalian extirpation. We propose a multi-pronged conservation strategy to help save threatened mammals from immediate extinction and avoid a collapse of food security for hundreds of millions of people.

Keywords

wild meat; bushmeat; hunting; mammals; extinction

Published in

Royal Society Open Science
2016, volume: 3, number: 10, article number: 160498
Publisher: ROYAL SOC

SLU Authors

Global goals (SDG)

SDG2 Zero hunger
SDG15 Life on land
SDG17 Partnerships for the goals

UKÄ Subject classification

Ecology

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.160498

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/80698