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Accessing silence : research methods into sexual harassment : a case study of the Committee of Enquiry into Sexual Harassment at the University of Cape Town

Biological extinction rates have escalated by as much as 1000 times the background extinction rate over the last 1500 years, causing concern over the long-term survival of many species. Avian extinctions since 1600 have been well documented relative to other taxa, as have current levels of avian thr...

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Main Author: Sutherland, Carla
Other Authors: Marv Simons and Pam Reynolds
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Sutherland, Carla
author2 Marv Simons and Pam Reynolds
author_browse Marv Simons and Pam Reynolds
Sutherland, Carla
author_facet Marv Simons and Pam Reynolds
Sutherland, Carla
author_sort Sutherland, Carla
collection Thesis
description Biological extinction rates have escalated by as much as 1000 times the background extinction rate over the last 1500 years, causing concern over the long-term survival of many species. Avian extinctions since 1600 have been well documented relative to other taxa, as have current levels of avian threat. This study analyses avian extinctions post-1600 and current threats in an attempt to develop some predictive capacity about which avian taxa should be awa,rded the highest conservation priority. Analyses performed include examinations of the causes of avian extinction and threat, geographical location of extinct and threatened species, prehistoric and historical extinction rates, endemicity, migration, bird body size and phylogenetic diversity. An analysis dealing with historical and phylogenetic aspects of endangered and critically threatened species was performed, from which the world's most threatened species were identified. Factors which were the primary cause of historical extinctions are generally not the primary factors threatening today's extant avifauna. Whilst introduced predators and exploitation were primary causes of historical extinctions, habitat destruction poses the greatest threat to extant birds. Species predisposed to extinction typically have restricted ranges, and, compounded by habitat loss, these ranges are becoming more restricted. This has resulted in mainland-dwelling species becoming as prone to extinction as island-dwelling species have been historically. IIltroduced predators, however, do still threaten many of the world's most threatened species and their potential effects are highlighted in the phylogenetic analysis. Already, many extinctions may be inevitable over the next 25 years as a result of habitat loss. The magnitude of extinctions across all animal and plant species in the next few decades could be comparable with that of previous mass extinctions unless immediate conservation action is taken. However, future conservation efforts will have to be prioritized, and this study is intended as a contribution towards such a prioritization exercise.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:58.458Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40521 Accessing silence : research methods into sexual harassment : a case study of the Committee of Enquiry into Sexual Harassment at the University of Cape Town Sutherland, Carla Marv Simons and Pam Reynolds Ornithology Biological extinction rates have escalated by as much as 1000 times the background extinction rate over the last 1500 years, causing concern over the long-term survival of many species. Avian extinctions since 1600 have been well documented relative to other taxa, as have current levels of avian threat. This study analyses avian extinctions post-1600 and current threats in an attempt to develop some predictive capacity about which avian taxa should be awa,rded the highest conservation priority. Analyses performed include examinations of the causes of avian extinction and threat, geographical location of extinct and threatened species, prehistoric and historical extinction rates, endemicity, migration, bird body size and phylogenetic diversity. An analysis dealing with historical and phylogenetic aspects of endangered and critically threatened species was performed, from which the world's most threatened species were identified. Factors which were the primary cause of historical extinctions are generally not the primary factors threatening today's extant avifauna. Whilst introduced predators and exploitation were primary causes of historical extinctions, habitat destruction poses the greatest threat to extant birds. Species predisposed to extinction typically have restricted ranges, and, compounded by habitat loss, these ranges are becoming more restricted. This has resulted in mainland-dwelling species becoming as prone to extinction as island-dwelling species have been historically. IIltroduced predators, however, do still threaten many of the world's most threatened species and their potential effects are highlighted in the phylogenetic analysis. Already, many extinctions may be inevitable over the next 25 years as a result of habitat loss. The magnitude of extinctions across all animal and plant species in the next few decades could be comparable with that of previous mass extinctions unless immediate conservation action is taken. However, future conservation efforts will have to be prioritized, and this study is intended as a contribution towards such a prioritization exercise. 2024-08-16T13:14:37Z 2024-08-16T13:14:37Z 1994 2024-08-15T12:55:40Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40521 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Ornithology
Sutherland, Carla
Accessing silence : research methods into sexual harassment : a case study of the Committee of Enquiry into Sexual Harassment at the University of Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Accessing silence : research methods into sexual harassment : a case study of the Committee of Enquiry into Sexual Harassment at the University of Cape Town
title_full Accessing silence : research methods into sexual harassment : a case study of the Committee of Enquiry into Sexual Harassment at the University of Cape Town
title_fullStr Accessing silence : research methods into sexual harassment : a case study of the Committee of Enquiry into Sexual Harassment at the University of Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Accessing silence : research methods into sexual harassment : a case study of the Committee of Enquiry into Sexual Harassment at the University of Cape Town
title_short Accessing silence : research methods into sexual harassment : a case study of the Committee of Enquiry into Sexual Harassment at the University of Cape Town
title_sort accessing silence research methods into sexual harassment a case study of the committee of enquiry into sexual harassment at the university of cape town
topic Ornithology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40521
work_keys_str_mv AT sutherlandcarla accessingsilenceresearchmethodsintosexualharassmentacasestudyofthecommitteeofenquiryintosexualharassmentattheuniversityofcapetown