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News > Global Biodiversity Map to Guide Plant Conservation
Global Biodiversity Map to Guide Plant Conservation
GLOBAL
22nd March 2007
The map, which accompanies a study published in this week's early online issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, highlights areas of particular concern for conservation. It also, the scientists say, provides much needed assistance in gauging the likely impact of climate change on the services plants provide to humans. Walter Jetz of UCSD and Holger Kreft of the University of Bonn sought in their study to determine how well the diversity, or the “richness,” of plant species could be predicted from environmental conditions alone. “Plants provide important services to humans—such as ornaments, structure, food and bio-molecules that can be used for the development of drugs or alternative fuels—that increase in value with their richness,” says Jetz, an assistant professor of biology at UCSD and the senior author of the paper. “Tropical countries such as Ecuador or Colombia harbor by a factor 10 to 100 higher plant species richness than most parts of the United States or Europe. The question is, Why?” While explorers to these tropical regions long ago recognized this increased diversity over more temperate regions, the general understanding among ecologists about this striking difference continues to be very limited. “Given that we are far off from knowing the individual distributions of the world's 300,000 odd plant species,” says Jetz. “Holger Kreft and I investigated how well the richness of plants can be predicted from environmental conditions alone.” Combining field-survey based species counts from over a thousand regions worldwide with high-resolution environmental data, the scientists were able to accurately capture the factors that promote high species richness of plants. “This allowed us to estimate the richness of yet unsurveyed parts of the world,” says Jetz. “The global map of estimated plant species richness highlights areas of particular concern for conservation and provides much needed assistance in gauging the likely impact of climate change on the services plants provide to humans. It may also help to pinpoint areas that deserve further attention for the discovery of plants or drugs yet unknown to humanity.” “Climate change may drive to extinction plants that hold important cures before we find them,” says Kreft, a biologist at the Nees Institute for Biodiversity of Plants at the University of Bonn. “Ecological research like ours that captures complex diversity - environment relationships on a global scale may assist in a small, but important way so that such a fatal potential failure can be averted.”
Climate Change and Plant ConservationClimate change is already happening and is predicted to get much worse. This page outlines the effects that climate change may have on plant communities, and thus the threats to the well-being of human societies that depend on them. Find Out MoreUNEP - World Conservation Monitoring Centre World Commission on Protected Areas Union of Concerned Scientists - Global Warming |
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The GSPC is a plan to save the world's plant species. Botanic gardens are making a major contribution worldwide. Click the image to find out more.
Target 8: Conserving Threatened Plants and Restoring Plant Diversity
Designed for anyone who is in a position to contribute to the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation, this PDF leaflet is intended to raise awareness about Target 8 of the GSPC. Free to download and print yourself, or you can contact BGCI to discuss distribution of large batches.
Getting Biodiversity Projects to Work: Towards More Effective Conservation and Development (McShane & Wells, 2004)
Integrated Conservation and Development Projects (ICDPs) represent the most popular approach to conserving the world's biodiversity. This book synthesises experience of the wide variety of ICDP initiatives, exploring both practice and theory, to better inform both practicioners and decision makers. |
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