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Abstract The current perception that climate change is the principal threat to biodiversity is at best premature. Although highly relevant, it detracts focus and effort from the primary threats: habitat destruction and overexploitation. We collated causes of vertebrate extinctions since 1900, threat information for amphibia, birds, and mammals from the IUCN Red List, and scrutinized others’ attempts to compare climate change with commensurate anthropogenic threats. In each analysis, none of the arguments founded on climate change's wide‐ranging effects are as urgent for biodiversity as those for habitat loss and overexploitation. Present conservation efforts must refocus on these issues. Conserving ecosystems by focusing on these major threats not only protects biodiversity but is the only available, economically viable, global strategy to reverse climate change.
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Tim Caro
Zeke W. Rowe
Joël Berger
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
Conservation Letters
Princeton University
University of California, Davis
University of Bristol
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Caro et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69de96b3499d77a496b0bedb — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12868