Phylogeny, extinction and conservation: embracing uncertainties in a time of urgency

作者: Félix Forest , Keith A. Crandall , Mark W. Chase , Daniel P. Faith

DOI: 10.1098/RSTB.2014.0002

关键词:

摘要: Evolutionary studies have played a fundamental role in our understanding of life, but until recently, they had only a relatively modest involvement in addressing conservation issues. The main goal of the present discussion meeting issue is to offer a platform to present the available methods allowing the integration of phylogenetic and extinction risk data in conservation planning. Here, we identify the main knowledge gaps in biodiversity science, which include incomplete sampling, reconstruction biases in phylogenetic analyses, partly known species distribution ranges, and the difficulty in producing conservation assessments for all known species, not to mention that much of the effective biological diversity remains to be discovered. Given the impact that human activities have on biodiversity and the urgency with which we need to address these issues, imperfect assumptions need to be sanctioned and surrogates used in the race to salvage as much as possible of our natural and evolutionary heritage. We discuss some aspects of the uncertainties found in biodiversity science, such as the ideal surrogates for biodiversity, the gaps in our knowledge and the numerous available phylogenetic diversity-based methods. We also introduce a series of cases studies that demonstrate how evolutionary biology can effectively contribute to biodiversity conservation science.

参考文章(62)
Kim Sterelny, James Maclaurin, What Is Biodiversity ,(2008)
Aki Mimoto, Mike Steel, Arne Ø Mooers, Hedging our bets: the expected contribution of species to future phylogenetic diversity. Evolutionary Bioinformatics. ,vol. 3, pp. 237- 244 ,(2007) , 10.4137/EBO.S0
Florent Mazel, François Guilhaumon, Nicolas Mouquet, Vincent Devictor, Dominique Gravel, Julien Renaud, Marcus Vinicius Cianciaruso, Rafael Loyola, José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho, David Mouillot, Wilfried Thuiller, Multifaceted diversity-area relationships reveal global hotspots of mammalian species, trait and lineage diversity Global Ecology and Biogeography. ,vol. 23, pp. 836- 847 ,(2014) , 10.1111/GEB.12158
Catherine H. Graham, Paul V. A. Fine, Phylogenetic beta diversity: linking ecological and evolutionary processes across space in time Ecology Letters. ,vol. 11, pp. 1265- 1277 ,(2008) , 10.1111/J.1461-0248.2008.01256.X
Phylogenetic pattern and the quantification of organismal biodiversity Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. ,vol. 345, pp. 45- 58 ,(1994) , 10.1098/RSTB.1994.0085
Magnus Bordewich, Charles Semple, Budgeted Nature Reserve Selection with diversity feature loss and arbitrary split systems Journal of Mathematical Biology. ,vol. 64, pp. 69- 85 ,(2012) , 10.1007/S00285-011-0405-9
Steven Kelly, Richard Grenyer, Robert W. Scotland, Phylogenetic trees do not reliably predict feature diversity Diversity and Distributions. ,vol. 20, pp. 600- 612 ,(2014) , 10.1111/DDI.12188
DAN ROSAUER, SHAWN W. LAFFAN, MICHAEL D. CRISP, STEPHEN C. DONNELLAN, LYN G. COOK, Phylogenetic endemism: a new approach for identifying geographical concentrations of evolutionary history. Molecular Ecology. ,vol. 18, pp. 4061- 4072 ,(2009) , 10.1111/J.1365-294X.2009.04311.X
Laure Zupan, Mar Cabeza, Luigi Maiorano, Cristina Roquet, Vincent Devictor, Sébastien Lavergne, David Mouillot, Nicolas Mouquet, Julien Renaud, Wilfried Thuiller, Spatial mismatch of phylogenetic diversity across three vertebrate groups and protected areas in Europe. Diversity and Distributions. ,vol. 20, pp. 674- 685 ,(2014) , 10.1111/DDI.12186