A comprehensive study conducted by an international team of biologists, planetary scientists, and conservationists has highlighted the growing threat of extinction faced by non-human primate populations due to climate change. Published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, the study outlines how changing environmental conditions are likely to impact primates across the globe, potentially pushing many species toward extinction.
The researchers collected extensive data from 22,705 locations across four major primate habitats: Madagascar, Asia, Africa, and the Americas (including South and Central America and the Caribbean). By combining this data with specific primate characteristics, such as body size, activity patterns, habitat range, and evolutionary uniqueness, they developed a model to calculate the extinction risks primates face as their environments undergo rapid change.
Continue reading… “Climate Change Threatens Global Primate Populations: New Study Reveals Extinction Risks”
