Threat reduction must be coupled with targeted recovery programmes to conserve global bird diversity

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Abstract

Biodiversity is undergoing severe declines while threats to natural populations continue to escalate worldwide. Ambitious international commitments have been made to preserve biodiversity, with the goal of preventing extinctions and maintaining ecosystem resilience, yet the efficacy of large-scale protection remains unclear. Here we use a trait-based approach to show that global actions – such as the immediate abatement of all threats across at least half of species ranges for ∼10,000 bird species - will only prevent half of projected species extinctions and functional diversity loss attributable to current and future threats in the next 100 years. Nonetheless, targeted recovery programmes prioritizing protection of the 100 most functionally unique threatened birds could avoid 68% of projected functional diversity loss. Actions targeting ‘habitat loss and degradation’ will prevent the greatest number of species extinctions and proportion of functional diversity loss relative to other drivers of extinction, whereas control of ‘hunting and collection’ and ‘disturbance and accidental mortality’ would save fewer species but disproportionately boost functional richness. These findings show that conservation of avian diversity requires action partitioned across all drivers of decline, and highlights the importance of understanding and mitigating the ecological impacts of species extinctions predicted to occur even under optimistic levels of conservation action.

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