Large Carnivores Under Siege

As populations of top predators decline in ecosystems the world over, researchers chart the widespread effects.

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A Yellowstone wolfWIKIMEDIA, DOUG SMITH - NATIONAL PARK SERVICEMore than three quarters of Earth’s large carnivorous animal species are now in decline, a trend that has far-reaching ecological impacts, according to a research published on Friday (January 10). The study, published in Science, tracked the conservation status and ecological roles of the planet’s 31 largest predators, including lions, gray wolves, dingos, and bears. “Globally, we are losing our large carnivores,” lead author William Ripple of Oregon State University told the BBC. “Their ranges are collapsing. Many of these animals are at risk of extinction, either locally or globally.”

Habitat loss, hunting, and prey depletion are key among the forces conspiring against many of the imperiled carnivore species, the authors wrote. Seventeen of the 31 species considered in the new research are now restricted to territories that are less than half their historic range.

The effects of what the authors describe as human “persecution” of these predatory animals ripple through the ecosystems and food webs they find themselves atop. For example, fewer wolves and cougars in the Greater Yellowstone ecosystem has meant less predation on herbivorous mammals, such as elk and deer, whose expanded populations have degraded vegetation, which disrupts the habitat and food sources of birds and small mammals. Similar patterns of disruption play out from the Amazon and Africa to South East ...

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Meet the Author

  • Bob Grant

    From 2017 to 2022, Bob Grant was Editor in Chief of The Scientist, where he started in 2007 as a Staff Writer.
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