Department of Biology and the Keck Center for Behavioral Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012 May 8;109(19):7368-73. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1113867109. Epub 2012 Apr 23.
Most of the described and probably undescribed species on Earth are insects. Global models of species diversity rarely focus on insects and none attempt to address unknown, undescribed diversity. We assembled a database representing about 13,000 records for ant generic distribution from over 350 regions that cover much of the globe. Based on two models of diversity and endemicity, we identified regions where our knowledge of ant diversity is most limited, regions we have called "hotspots of discovery." A priori, such regions might be expected to be remote and untouched. Instead, we found that the hotspots of discovery are also the regions in which biodiversity is the most threatened by habitat destruction. Our results not only highlight the immediate need for conservation of the remaining natural habitats in these regions, but also the extent to which, by focusing on well-known groups such as vertebrates, we may fail to conserve the far greater diversity of the smaller species yet to be found.
地球上大多数已描述和可能未描述的物种都是昆虫。物种多样性的全球模型很少关注昆虫,也没有试图解决未知的、未被描述的多样性。我们收集了一个数据库,其中包含了来自全球 350 多个地区的约 13000 个蚂蚁属分布记录。基于两种多样性和特有性模型,我们确定了我们对蚂蚁多样性了解最有限的地区,我们称之为“发现热点”。根据先验知识,这些热点可能位于偏远和未受干扰的地区。然而,我们发现,发现热点也是生物多样性因栖息地破坏而受到最大威胁的地区。我们的研究结果不仅突出了保护这些地区剩余自然栖息地的迫切需要,还突出了通过关注脊椎动物等知名群体,我们可能无法保护那些尚未被发现的、更小的物种的多样性的程度。