Paths to extinction: mode of habitat loss structures extinction
thresholds and debts
Abstract
Species are faced with global changes that can lead to decline and
extinction through one of two routes: habitat destruction, such as
occurs locally with land-use change, and habitat degradation, which
often occurs through larger-scale changes such as nitrogen deposition or
climate change. We develop theory showing that, even when these two
forms of global change have identical impact on a species’ total amount
of habitat, they have qualitatively different consequences for species
dynamics and extinction. Using metapopulation theory and simulations, we
find distinct impacts of these global changes characterized through
several responses: the rate of species decline with habitat reduction,
extinction thresholds, and the duration of extinction debts. Habitat
degradation causes a faster decline in species when habitat reduction is
low, making it particularly detrimental for rare species. Habitat
destruction has smaller impacts for low habitat reduction but shows
clear thresholds beyond which it surpasses degradation’s negative
impact; the location and steepness of the threshold depends on species
dispersal, with poor dispersers having steeper thresholds. Symptomatic
sampling to predict population trends is predicted to fail for both
types of global change, due to thresholds (habitat destruction) and
lagged dynamics that lead to extinction debts (habitat degradation). Our
research clarifies why impacts of one type of global change may poorly
predict impacts of the other and suggests general rules for predicting
the long-term impacts of global changes based on species traits.