PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Patterns of Freshwater Species Richness, Endemism, and Vulnerability in California.

  • Jeanette K Howard,
  • Kirk R Klausmeyer,
  • Kurt A Fesenmyer,
  • Joseph Furnish,
  • Thomas Gardali,
  • Ted Grantham,
  • Jacob V E Katz,
  • Sarah Kupferberg,
  • Patrick McIntyre,
  • Peter B Moyle,
  • Peter R Ode,
  • Ryan Peek,
  • Rebecca M Quiñones,
  • Andrew C Rehn,
  • Nick Santos,
  • Steve Schoenig,
  • Larry Serpa,
  • Jackson D Shedd,
  • Joe Slusark,
  • Joshua H Viers,
  • Amber Wright,
  • Scott A Morrison

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130710
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. e0130710

Abstract

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The ranges and abundances of species that depend on freshwater habitats are declining worldwide. Efforts to counteract those trends are often hampered by a lack of information about species distribution and conservation status and are often strongly biased toward a few well-studied groups. We identified the 3,906 vascular plants, macroinvertebrates, and vertebrates native to California, USA, that depend on fresh water for at least one stage of their life history. We evaluated the conservation status for these taxa using existing government and non-governmental organization assessments (e.g., endangered species act, NatureServe), created a spatial database of locality observations or distribution information from ~400 data sources, and mapped patterns of richness, endemism, and vulnerability. Although nearly half of all taxa with conservation status (n = 1,939) are vulnerable to extinction, only 114 (6%) of those vulnerable taxa have a legal mandate for protection in the form of formal inclusion on a state or federal endangered species list. Endemic taxa are at greater risk than non-endemics, with 90% of the 927 endemic taxa vulnerable to extinction. Records with spatial data were available for a total of 2,276 species (61%). The patterns of species richness differ depending on the taxonomic group analyzed, but are similar across taxonomic level. No particular taxonomic group represents an umbrella for all species, but hotspots of high richness for listed species cover 40% of the hotspots for all other species and 58% of the hotspots for vulnerable freshwater species. By mapping freshwater species hotspots we show locations that represent the top priority for conservation action in the state. This study identifies opportunities to fill gaps in the evaluation of conservation status for freshwater taxa in California, to address the lack of occurrence information for nearly 40% of freshwater taxa and nearly 40% of watersheds in the state, and to implement adequate protections for freshwater taxa where they are currently lacking.