Camilo Mora, Derek P. Tittensor, Sina Adl, Alastair G. B. Simpson, Boris Worm
PLOS | Biology August 23, 2011
The article contents:
Abstract
Author Summary
Introduction
Results
Discussion
Materials and Methods
Supporting Information
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
References
Here I transcript only the introduction and discussion.
For the rest, go to the direction in the web, above.
Introduction
Robert May recently noted
that if aliens visited our planet,
one of their first questions would be,
“How many distinct life forms
—species—does your planet have?”
He also pointed out that we would be
“embarrassed” by the uncertainty in our answer.
This narrative illustrates
the fundamental nature of knowing
how many species there are on Earth,
and our limited progress
with this research topic thus far.
Unfortunately, limited sampling
of the world's biodiversity to date
has prevented a direct quantification
of the number of species on Earth,
while indirect estimates remain uncertain
due to the use of controversial approaches
(see detailed review of available methods,
estimates, and limitations in Table 1).
Globally, our best approximation
to the total number of species
is based on the opinion of taxonomic experts,
whose estimates range between
3 and 100 million species;
although these estimations
likely represent the outer bounds
of the total number of species,
expert-opinion approaches
have been questioned
due to their limited empirical basis
and subjectivity (Table 1).
Other studies have used
macroecological patterns
and biodiversity ratios
in novel ways to improve estimates
of the total number of species (Table 1),
but several of the underlying assumptions
in these approaches have been the topic
of sometimes heated controversy, (Table 1);
moreover their overall predictions
concern only specific groups,
such as insects, deep sea invertebrates,
large organisms, animals, fungi, or plants.
With the exception
of a few extensively studied taxa
(e.g., birds, fishes),
we are still remarkably uncertain
as to how many species exist,
highlighting a significant gap
in our basic knowledge of life on Earth.
Here we present a quantitative method
to estimate the global number of species
in all domains of life.
We report that the number of higher taxa,
which is much more completely known
than the total number of species,
is strongly correlated to taxonomic rank
and that such a pattern allows the extrapolation
of the global number of species
for any kingdom of life (Figures 1 and 2).
Discussion
Knowing the total number of species
has been a question of great interest
motivated in part by our collective curiosity
about the diversity of life on Earth
and in part by the need to provide
a reference point for current
and future losses of biodiversity.
Unfortunately, incomplete
sampling of the world's biodiversity
combined with a lack of robust extrapolation
approaches has yielded highly
uncertain and controversial estimates
of how many species there are on Earth.
In this paper,
we describe a new approach
whose validation against
existing inventories
and explicit statistical nature
adds greater robustness
to the estimation of the number
of species of given taxa.
In general, the approach
was reasonably robust to various caveats,
and we hope that future improvements in data quality
will further diminish problems
with synonyms and incompleteness of data,
and lead to even better
(and likely higher) estimates
of global species richness.
Our current estimate of ~8.7 million species
narrows the range of 3 to 100 million species
suggested by taxonomic experts
and it suggests that after 250 years
of taxonomic classification
only a small fraction of species on Earth (~14%)
and in the ocean (~9%) have been indexed
in a central database (Table 2).
Closing this knowledge gap may still take a lot longer.
Considering current rates of description
of eukaryote species in the last 20 years
(i.e., 6,200 species per year; ±811 SD; Figure 3F–3J),
the average number of new species
described per taxonomist's career (i.e., 24.8 species)
and the estimated average cost to describe animal species
(i.e., US$48,500 per species) and assuming
that these values remain constant
and are general among taxonomic groups,
describing Earth's remaining species
may take as long as 1,200 years
and would require 303,000 taxonomists
at an approximated cost of US$364 billion.
With extinction rates
now exceeding natural background rates
by a factor of 100 to 1,000, our results
also suggest that this slow advance
in the description of species
will lead to species becoming extinct
before we know they even existed.
High rates of biodiversity loss
provide an urgent incentive
to increase our knowledge
of Earth's remaining species.
Previous studies have indicated
that current catalogues of species
are biased towards conspicuous species
with large geographical ranges,
body sizes, and abundances.
This suggests that the bulk of species
that remain to be discovered
are likely to be small-ranged
and perhaps concentrated in hotspots
and less explored areas
such as the deep sea and soil;
although their small body-size
and cryptic nature suggest
that many could be found
literally in our own “backyards”
(after Hawksworth and Rossman).
Though remarkable efforts
and progress have been made,
a further closing of this knowledge gap
will require a renewed interest
in exploration and taxonomy
by both researchers and funding agencies,
and a continuing effort to catalogue
existing biodiversity data
in publicly available databases.
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