Hi genetic indicator group,
In today's discussion, we shortly touched on the subject of identifying how many populations went extinct.
This is often much harder than it seems, for two reasons:
As the area of occupancy (AOO) and extent of occurrence (EOO) of a population shrink from a single large continuous metapopulation with diffuse subpopulation boundaries, you go from 1 population to many populations, say 9.
Populations lost: ZERO. In fact, your ratio is an integer: 9/1: you gained eight populations.
As the decline continues you then go from many isolated populations to again a few isolated populations (say 2). Depending on your point of reference, you can say that you gained many to a few populations.
Populations lost: it depends on your point of reference. If your reference is the first point in time, it's zero, you gained 1 population.
If your reference is however the onset of fragmentation, you have lost 78% of the populations.
Secondly, consider that historical records of species presence are often more incomplete. We have may have data on the occurrence from early species atlas projects, but not on the absence. So you may have scattered dots on a map (e.g., 10 km x 10 km squares). We can use this to show that a species occurred at some time in a certain area, but not anymore. We lost some of the area of occupancy, but did we also lose a population? Very often, that's hard to establish.
Take as an example the attached cartoon, a grid of 10 x 10 cells, with occupancy indicated by a O.
In the top we have the true distribution and area, at the bottom the observed distribution.
We go from 1 (large continuous) to 9 (fragmented) to 2 populations. How many populations did we lose? You could say none at all. The population just became much smaller and fragmented into two. We can see that the area of occupancy went from 100 grid cells in 1900 to 8 in 2020. However, we rarely have such detailed data.
More typically, the occupancy would be like in the bottom: some observations, and no observations where the species was present, by a lack of observation effort/knowledge.
In the 1900 situation, it's hard to see if we had 1 large population or a handful of them.
At the 1960 situation we see we lost cells relative to 1900, but did we lose a population?
We can clearly tell that the extent of occurrence declined from 1900 to now, and from 1960 to now. We're unsure of the AOO declined between 1900 and 1960, but it did decline between 1960 and 2020.
But did we lose a population? If 1960 is your point of reference we did. If we use 1900 we didn't.
Red lists use AOO and EOO, but not on the time scales I considered here. Red Lists only assess this for the past 3 generations or 10 years (whichever is longest).
So the question now is: do we also set a baseline somewhere? Do we ask to standardize a methodology to assess extinctions? If we don't, you can cherry pick any way you want, and with the same data claim the number of populations grew by 200% (1900 to 2020) or declined by 80% (1960 to 2020).
Just some thoughts on issues we encountered for the Belgian assessment.
Joachim & Luis