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.