Biological knowledge shortfalls impede conservation efforts in poorly studied taxa—A case study of Laboulbeniomycetes

Author:

Haelewaters Danny123ORCID,Matthews Thomas J.45ORCID,Wayman Joseph P.4ORCID,Cazabonne Jonathan6ORCID,Heyman Felix1,Quandt C. Alisha2ORCID,Martin Thomas E.7

Affiliation:

1. Research Group Mycology, Department of Biology Ghent University Ghent Belgium

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Colorado Boulder Colorado USA

3. Faculty of Science University of South Bohemia České Budějovice Czech Republic

4. School of Geography, Earth & Environmental Sciences and Birmingham Institute of Forest Research University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

5. CE3C – Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes/Azorean Biodiversity Group/CHANGE – Global Change and Sustainability Institute and Universidade dos Açores – Faculty of Agricultural Sciences and Environment Angra do Heroísmo Portugal

6. Groupe de Recherche en Écologie de la MRC Abitibi (GREMA), Forest Research Institute Université du Québec en Abitibi‐Témiscamingue Amos Quebec Canada

7. School of Natural Sciences, College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering Bangor University Bangor UK

Abstract

AbstractMost empirical research on biological shortfalls has focused on vertebrate taxa. This is important given many species in poorly studied groups such as invertebrates, plants, and fungi are predicted to possess high conservation risk. Here, we focus on Laboulbeniomycetes: a class of microfungi that are understudied. We examined four shortfalls: Linnean (knowledge gaps in species diversity), Wallacean (knowledge gaps in distributions), Latimerian (knowledge gaps in species persistence), and the newly introduced Scottian (knowledge gaps in species conservation assessments) shortfalls. The Linnean shortfall in Laboulbeniomycetes is hard to predict due to inconsistent species description rates. Analysis of distribution patterns indicates Laboulbeniomycetes are likely to experience an extremely high Wallacean shortfall, with many species having highly disjunct known distributions. Latimerian shortfall analysis shows over half (51%) of Laboulbeniomycetes have not been recorded in >50 years, while the group has a collective Scottian shortfall of 100%, given none of the 2454 described species have received an IUCN threat assessment. We suggest continued study of natural history collections, expanded citizen science programmes, and machine‐learning identification approaches as important tools for reducing knowledge shortfalls in both Laboulbeniomycetes and poorly studied taxa more generally.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference88 articles.

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