Sosef Marc S M, Dauby Gilles, Blach-Overgaard Anne, van der Burgt Xander, Catarino Luís, Damen Theo, Deblauwe Vincent, Dessein Steven, Dransfield John, Droissart Vincent, Duarte Maria Cristina, Engledow Henry, Fadeur Geoffrey, Figueira Rui, Gereau Roy E, Hardy Olivier J, Harris David J, de Heij Janneke, Janssens Steven, Klomberg Yannick, Ley Alexandra C, Mackinder Barbara A, Meerts Pierre, van de Poel Jeike L, Sonké Bonaventure, Stévart Tariq, Stoffelen Piet, Svenning Jens-Christian, Sepulchre Pierre, Zaiss Rainer, Wieringa Jan J, Couvreur Thomas L P
Botanic Garden Meise, Nieuwelaan 38, BE-1860, Meise, Belgium.
DIADE, Université Montpellier, IRD, Montpellier, France.
BMC Biol. 2017 Mar 7;15(1):15. doi: 10.1186/s12915-017-0356-8.
Understanding the patterns of biodiversity distribution and what influences them is a fundamental pre-requisite for effective conservation and sustainable utilisation of biodiversity. Such knowledge is increasingly urgent as biodiversity responds to the ongoing effects of global climate change. Nowhere is this more acute than in species-rich tropical Africa, where so little is known about plant diversity and its distribution. In this paper, we use RAINBIO - one of the largest mega-databases of tropical African vascular plant species distributions ever compiled - to address questions about plant and growth form diversity across tropical Africa.
The filtered RAINBIO dataset contains 609,776 georeferenced records representing 22,577 species. Growth form data are recorded for 97% of all species. Records are well distributed, but heterogeneous across the continent. Overall, tropical Africa remains poorly sampled. When using sampling units (SU) of 0.5°, just 21 reach appropriate collection density and sampling completeness, and the average number of records per species per SU is only 1.84. Species richness (observed and estimated) and endemism figures per country are provided. Benin, Cameroon, Gabon, Ivory Coast and Liberia appear as the botanically best-explored countries, but none are optimally explored. Forests in the region contain 15,387 vascular plant species, of which 3013 are trees, representing 5-7% of the estimated world's tropical tree flora. The central African forests have the highest endemism rate across Africa, with approximately 30% of species being endemic.
The botanical exploration of tropical Africa is far from complete, underlining the need for intensified inventories and digitization. We propose priority target areas for future sampling efforts, mainly focused on Tanzania, Atlantic Central Africa and West Africa. The observed number of tree species for African forests is smaller than those estimated from global tree data, suggesting that a significant number of species are yet to be discovered. Our data provide a solid basis for a more sustainable management and improved conservation of tropical Africa's unique flora, and is important for achieving Objective 1 of the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation 2011-2020. In turn, RAINBIO provides a solid basis for a more sustainable management and improved conservation of tropical Africa's unique flora.
了解生物多样性分布模式及其影响因素是有效保护和可持续利用生物多样性的基本前提。随着生物多样性对全球气候变化持续影响做出响应,这种知识变得愈发迫切。在物种丰富的热带非洲,这种情况尤为严峻,因为人们对植物多样性及其分布知之甚少。在本文中,我们使用RAINBIO(有史以来汇编的最大的热带非洲维管植物物种分布巨型数据库之一)来解决有关整个热带非洲植物和生长型多样性的问题。
经过筛选的RAINBIO数据集包含609,776条地理参考记录,代表22,577个物种。97%的物种记录了生长型数据。记录分布良好,但在整个大陆上并不均匀。总体而言,热带非洲的采样仍然不足。当使用0.5°的采样单元(SU)时,只有21个达到了适当的收集密度和采样完整性,每个SU中每个物种的平均记录数仅为1.84。提供了每个国家的物种丰富度(观察到的和估计的)以及特有性数据。贝宁、喀麦隆、加蓬、科特迪瓦和利比里亚似乎是植物学研究最多的国家,但没有一个得到了最佳研究。该地区的森林包含15,387种维管植物,其中3013种是树木,占世界热带树木植物群估计数的5-7%。中非森林的特有率在非洲最高,约30%的物种为特有种。
热带非洲的植物学探索远未完成,这突出了加强清查和数字化的必要性。我们提出了未来采样工作的优先目标区域,主要集中在坦桑尼亚、中非大西洋地区和西非。观察到的非洲森林树种数量少于根据全球树木数据估计的数量,这表明还有大量物种有待发现。我们的数据为更可持续地管理和更好地保护热带非洲独特的植物群提供了坚实基础,对于实现《2011-2020年全球植物保护战略》的目标1非常重要。反过来,RAINBIO为更可持续地管理和更好地保护热带非洲独特的植物群提供了坚实基础。