Enhanced risk assessment framework integrating distribution dynamics, genetically inferred populations, and morphological traits of Diploderma lizards

Zool Res. 2025 Jan 18;46(1):15-26. doi: 10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2024.287.

Abstract

Assessing the threat status of species in response to global change is critical for biodiversity monitoring and conservation efforts. However, current frameworks, even the IUCN Red List, often neglect critical factors such as genetic diversity and the impacts of climate and land-use changes, hindering effective conservation planning. To address these limitations, we developed an enhanced extinction risk assessment framework using Diploderma lizards as a model. This framework incorporates long-term field surveys, environmental data, and land-use information to predict distributional changes for 10 recently described Diploderma species on the Qinghai-Xizang Plateau, which hold ecological significance but remain underassessed in conservation assessment. By integrating the distribution data and genetically inferred effective population sizes ( Ne), we conducted scenario analyses and used a rank-sum approach to calculate Risk ranking scores (RRS) for each species. This approach revealed significant discrepancies with the IUCN Red List assessments. Notably, D. yangi and D. qilin were identified as facing the highest extinction risk. Furthermore, D. vela, D. batangense, D. flaviceps, D. dymondi, D. yulongense, and D. laeviventre, currently classified as "Least Concern", were found to warrant reclassification as "Vulnerable" due to considerable threat from projected range contractions. Exploring the relationship between morphology and RRS revealed that traits such as snout-vent length and relative tail length could serve as potential predictors of extinction risk, offering preliminary metrics for assessing species vulnerability when comprehensive data are unavailable. This study enhances the precision of extinction risk assessment frameworks and demonstrates their capacity to refine and update risk assessments, especially for lesser-known taxa.

全球变化背景下物种受威胁等级评估是生物多样性监测和保护工作中至关重要的环节。世界自然保护联盟红色名录(IUCN Red List of Threatened Species)作为目前最权威、应用最广泛的物种受威胁信息来源,其评估标准却忽视了遗传多样性、气候和土地利用变化影响等对物种未来存续至关重要的因素,导致误判物种受威胁状况,阻碍针对性保护措施制定。为弥补上述不足,该研究结合有效种群大小、物种栖息地面积变化等关键因素,提出并优化了物种受威胁等级评估框架,并以分布于青藏高原的10个具有重要生态功能的龙蜥属( Diploderma)物种为对象,对新框架的有效性进行了验证。我们通过对龙蜥物种分布范围、当前和未来气候适宜区、适宜栖息地和有效种群大小进行秩合统计,汇总形成每个物种的风险排序分数(Risk Ranking Scores,RRS),用于评估物种受威胁等级。新框架评估表明察隅龙蜥( D. yangi)和麒麟龙蜥( D. qilin )当前受威胁等级最高。而帆背龙蜥( D. vela )、巴塘龙蜥 ( D. batangense)、草绿龙蜥( D. flaviceps )、裸耳龙蜥( D. dymondi )、玉龙龙蜥( D. yulonggense )和滑腹龙蜥( D. laeviventre ),由于在未来预计发生严重的分布范围和潜在栖息地丧失,其受威胁等级应从“无危(Least Concern)”更新为“易危(Vulnerable)”。此外,我们还发现头体长、相对尾长和相对头宽与风险排序分数之间具有统计显著相关性,这意味着这些形态特征可在数据缺乏的情况下初步推断物种受威胁状况。该研究改进了现有物种风险评估框架并展示了其有效性,为濒危物种保护提供更科学、更准确的参考信息,将对研究相对匮乏物种的风险评估工作中发挥重要作用。.

Keywords: Conservation Status; Effective Population Size; Extinction Risk Assessment; IUCN Red List; Lizard; Morphological Traits.

MeSH terms

  • Animal Distribution
  • Animals
  • China
  • Conservation of Natural Resources
  • Extinction, Biological
  • Lizards* / anatomy & histology
  • Lizards* / genetics
  • Lizards* / physiology
  • Population Dynamics
  • Risk Assessment

Associated data

  • BioProject/PRJNA1195238