Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Collections, Conservation and Research, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL, USA.
Nat Plants. 2024 Nov;10(11):1627-1634. doi: 10.1038/s41477-024-01832-7. Epub 2024 Oct 15.
Scientists' limited understanding of tropical plant communities obscures the true extent of species loss caused by habitat destruction. The Centinelan extinction hypothesis posits an extreme but widely referenced scenario wherein forest clearing causes the immediate extinction of species known only from a single geographic location. It remains unclear, however, whether the disappearance of such microendemics reflects their global extinction or insufficient collection effort at larger scales. Here we test these hypotheses by synthesizing decades of floristic data from the heavily deforested tropical cloud forest (TCF) at Centinela, Ecuador. We find that 99% of its putative microendemics have been collected elsewhere and are not extinct. Our field work also revealed new species, highlighting the enduring conservation value of TCFs and the intense efforts required to illuminate such plant diversity 'darkspots'. Field and herbarium research remain essential to the conservation action needed to forestall large-scale plant extinctions in Earth's beleaguered cloud forests.
科学家对热带植物群落的有限了解掩盖了因栖息地破坏而导致的物种丧失的真实程度。Centinela 灭绝假说假设了一种极端但广泛引用的情况,即森林砍伐会导致仅在一个地理位置发现的物种立即灭绝。然而,目前尚不清楚这些微观特有种的消失是反映了它们的全球灭绝还是在更大的范围内采集工作不足。在这里,我们通过综合来自厄瓜多尔 Centinela 严重砍伐的热带云雾林(TCF)的数十年植物区系数据来检验这些假说。我们发现,99%的假定微观特有种已经在其他地方被采集到,并未灭绝。我们的实地工作还发现了新的物种,突出了 TCF 具有持久的保护价值,以及阐明这种植物多样性“暗点”所需的巨大努力。实地和标本馆研究仍然是防止地球上饱受蹂躏的云雾林发生大规模植物灭绝所需的保护行动的重要组成部分。