Nature Conservation (Nov 2013)

Generation length for mammals

  • Michela Pacifici,
  • Luca Santini,
  • Moreno Di Marco,
  • Daniele Baisero,
  • Lucilla Francucci,
  • Gabriele Grottolo Marasini,
  • Piero Visconti,
  • Carlo Rondinini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/natureconservation.5.5734
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 0
pp. 89 – 94

Abstract

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Generation length (GL) is defined as the average age of parents of the current cohort, reflecting the turnover rate of breeding individuals in a population. GL is a fundamental piece of information for population ecology as well as for measuring species threat status (e.g. in the IUCN Red List). Here we present a dataset including GL records for all extant mammal species (n=5427). We first reviewed all data on GL published in the IUCN Red List database. We then calculated a value for species with available reproductive parameters (reproductive life span and age at first reproduction). We assigned to missing-data species a mean GL value from congeneric or confamilial species (depending on data availability). Finally, for a few remaining species, we assigned mean GL values from species with similar body mass and belonging to the same order. Our work provides the first attempt to complete a database of GL for mammals; it will be an essential reference point for all conservation-related studies that need pragmatic information on species GL, such as population dynamics and applications of the IUCN Red List assessment.