Poor protection of amphibian evolutionary history reveals opportunities for global protected areas
AbstractAs habitat loss is a major driver of amphibian population declines, protected areas (PAs) can play a crucial role in amphibian conservation. Documenting how well the global PA network captures the evolutionary history of amphibians can inform conservation prioritisation and action. We conducted a phylogenetic gap analysis to assess the extent to which amphibian phylogenetic diversity (PD) is unprotected by the PA network and compared this to other terrestrial vertebrate groups. 78% of amphibian species and 64% of global amphibian PD remains unprotected, which is higher than corresponding figures for squamates, mammals and birds. Amongst amphibians, salamanders were the least well protected, with 78% of PD unprotected, compared with 64% for caecilians and 63% for frogs. We identify areas that offer the greatest opportunity to capture unprotected amphibian evolutionary history. We could capture an additional 29.4% of amphibian PD, representing 40 billion years of evolutionary history, by protecting an additional 1.9% of global amphibian distributions (1.74% of global land area) and increasing the restrictions in 0.6% of amphibian distributions to match the management objectives of PAs in IUCN categories I or II. Importantly, we found that the spatial distribution of unprotected PD was correlated across all groups, indicating that expanding the PA network to conserve amphibian PD can secure imperilled vertebrate diversity more generally.