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      Recent shifts in the occurrence, cause, and magnitude of animal mass mortality events.

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          Abstract

          Mass mortality events (MMEs) are rapidly occurring catastrophic demographic events that punctuate background mortality levels. Individual MMEs are staggering in their observed magnitude: removing more than 90% of a population, resulting in the death of more than a billion individuals, or producing 700 million tons of dead biomass in a single event. Despite extensive documentation of individual MMEs, we have no understanding of the major features characterizing the occurrence and magnitude of MMEs, their causes, or trends through time. Thus, no framework exists for contextualizing MMEs in the wake of ongoing global and regional perturbations to natural systems. Here we present an analysis of 727 published MMEs from across the globe, affecting 2,407 animal populations. We show that the magnitude of MMEs has been intensifying for birds, fishes, and marine invertebrates; invariant for mammals; and decreasing for reptiles and amphibians. These shifts in magnitude proved robust when we accounted for an increase in the occurrence of MMEs since 1940. However, it remains unclear whether the increase in the occurrence of MMEs represents a true pattern or simply a perceived increase. Regardless, the increase in MMEs appears to be associated with a rise in disease emergence, biotoxicity, and events produced by multiple interacting stressors, yet temporal trends in MME causes varied among taxa and may be associated with increased detectability. In addition, MMEs with the largest magnitudes were those that resulted from multiple stressors, starvation, and disease. These results advance our understanding of rare demographic processes and their relationship to global and regional perturbations to natural systems.

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          Most cited references17

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          Directions in Conservation Biology

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            Mass extinctions in the marine fossil record.

            A new compilation of fossil data on invertebrate and vertebrate families indicates that four mass extinctions in the marine realm are statistically distinct from background extinction levels. These four occurred late in the Ordovician, Permian, Triassic, and Cretaceous periods. A fifth extinction event in the Devonian stands out from the background but is not statistically significant in these data. Background extinction rates appear to have declined since Cambrian time, which is consistent with the prediction that optimization of fitness should increase through evolutionary time.
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              Updated analyses of temperature and precipitation extreme indices since the beginning of the twentieth century: The HadEX2 dataset

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
                Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
                1091-6490
                0027-8424
                Jan 27 2015
                : 112
                : 4
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520; Department of Biological Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755; samuel.fey@yale.edu.
                [2 ] Department of Biology, University of San Diego, San Diego, CA 92110;
                [3 ] Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720; and.
                [4 ] Department of Biological Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755;
                [5 ] Department of Zoology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901.
                Article
                1414894112
                10.1073/pnas.1414894112
                25583498
                534e0cf9-3dca-4ade-a983-a54ad2fd1b9b
                History

                catastrophes,death,defaunation,rare demographic events
                catastrophes, death, defaunation, rare demographic events

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