Home

extirpata

Extirpata is a term used in conservation biology to denote the local extinction of a species from a defined geographic area, while the species continues to exist elsewhere. It is closely related to the broader concept of extirpation; in practice, extirpata is sometimes used to describe populations that have been removed from a region, with the remaining distribution unaffected.

Etymology and usage: The term derives from Latin extirpatus, meaning uprooted or eradicated. The form extirpata

Causes: Local extirpations arise from habitat destruction, fragmentation, overexploitation, invasive species, disease, and climate-related shifts. They

Detection and monitoring: Determining extirpata requires systematic surveys, historical records, and sometimes environmental DNA or species

Impact and management: Extirpations can alter ecosystem structure and function and raise extinction risk for populations

See also: Extinction, Local extinction, Conservation biology, Reintroduction.

is
the
feminine
participle
and
appears
in
Latinized
descriptions
or
as
an
adjective
in
taxonomic
contexts,
though
in
English
the
noun
form
extirpation
is
more
common
when
describing
the
process.
may
result
from
a
single
event
or
gradual
pressures
and
often
interact
with
other
regional
declines.
distribution
modeling
to
confirm
absence
in
the
region
while
conservation
status
remains
globally
non-extinct.
with
restricted
ranges.
Management
may
involve
habitat
restoration,
legal
protection,
translocation
or
reintroduction
elsewhere,
and
ongoing
monitoring.