Habitat loss predicts the functional extinction of fish from Amazonian
streams during the Anthropocene
Abstract
The evaluation of extinction risk has typically focused on species,
although a shift to a focus on ecosystem would appear to be an urgent
priority for conservation planning. Here, we investigated how fish
extinction modify the functioning of freshwater Amazonian ecosystems. We
sampled the fish and environmental conditions of 63 streams in the
eastern Amazon, and simulated extinction based on species vulnerability
to habitat loss. The simulated extinction of vulnerable species led to a
decrease in both the mean body size of the community and functional
rarity, and culminated in abrupt losses of ecosystem function after 5%
and 10% of extinction at local and regional scales. We provide robust
predictions on the modification of the ecosystem following the
extinction of fish species, which is a major step towards the
development of effective conservation measures that help to prevent the
loss of biodiversity and the potentially irreversible modifications of
ecosystem function.