Barreiro Kilian, Benestan Laura, Moritz Charlotte, Ducatez Simon, Gaertner Jean-Claude, Le Luyer Jérémy, Monaco Cristián J
IFREMER, IRD, Institut Louis-Malardé, Univ Polynésie française, UMR SECOPOL, Vairao, Tahiti, French Polynesia.
IFREMER, Univ Brest, CNRS, IRD, UMR-6539 LEMAR, Plouzané, Brittany, France.
Sci Rep. 2025 Jul 1;15(1):21043. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-06631-4.
The ongoing biodiversity crisis calls for a complete biodiversity inventory of marine and terrestrial ecosystems. The task is particularly challenging for fragmented island territories, where baseline biodiversity information is often difficult to procure. By centralising information from different sources (museums, research institutions, citizen scientists), 'big-data' platforms provide an opportunity to evaluate species biodiversity information of understudied regions. Using data primarily sourced from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), and complemented by a review of 56 potential data sources-of which nine provided unique, non-redundant records-we curated the first biogeographic dataset for both marine and terrestrial animal species in French Polynesia, a large territory composed of 124 islands and atolls that belongs to the Central Pacific region, a marine biodiversity hotspot facing conservation challenges. The dataset revealed heterogeneous species richness across archipelagos and islands, prompting an investigation into potential sampling biases (institutional, taxonomic, spatial) as well as an assessment of island-specific accessibility biases. We estimated that the archipelagos and islands had an inventory completeness rate that ranges from 1.9 to 98.4%, suggesting that a large proportion of the studied area remains poorly documented. Spatial and temporal sampling biases were partly explained by accessibility constraints (proximity to airports, roads or ports), and inventory completeness was higher for marine than terrestrial species. The biases quantified here challenge our ability to conduct biogeographic analyses that integrate the land-sea meta-ecosystem. Our database allows identifying taxa and sampling locations that require urgent attention, as well as comprehensively recorded species that can serve as indicators for environmental degradation. Explicitly acknowledging the inherent biases of biodiversity datasets is the first step towards a more comprehensive characterization of species diversity across fragmented territories. This information is crucial for guiding sound adaptive-management and conservation planning strategies.
当前的生物多样性危机要求对海洋和陆地生态系统进行全面的生物多样性清查。对于支离破碎的岛屿地区而言,这项任务极具挑战性,因为在这些地区,往往很难获取生物多样性的基线信息。通过整合来自不同来源(博物馆、研究机构、公民科学家)的信息,“大数据”平台为评估研究不足地区的物种生物多样性信息提供了契机。我们主要利用来自全球生物多样性信息机构(GBIF)的数据,并辅以对56个潜在数据源的审查(其中9个提供了独特的、非冗余的记录),精心整理出了法属波利尼西亚海洋和陆地动物物种的首个生物地理数据集。法属波利尼西亚是一个由124个岛屿和环礁组成的大片区域,属于中太平洋地区,是面临保护挑战的海洋生物多样性热点地区。该数据集揭示了各群岛和岛屿间物种丰富度的差异,促使我们对潜在的采样偏差(机构、分类学、空间方面)展开调查,并评估岛屿特有的可达性偏差。我们估计,各群岛和岛屿的清查完成率在1.9%至98.4%之间,这表明研究区域的很大一部分记录仍然很少。空间和时间采样偏差部分可由可达性限制(靠近机场、道路或港口)来解释,海洋物种的清查完成率高于陆地物种。这里量化的偏差对我们进行整合陆海元生态系统的生物地理分析的能力构成了挑战。我们的数据库有助于确定需要紧急关注的分类群和采样地点,以及可作为环境退化指标的记录全面的物种。明确认识到生物多样性数据集固有的偏差,是朝着更全面地描述支离破碎地区物种多样性迈出的第一步。这些信息对于指导合理的适应性管理和保护规划策略至关重要。