The use and misuse of herbarium specimens in evaluating plant extinction risks

Author:

Nic Lughadha Eimear1ORCID,Walker Barnaby E.1ORCID,Canteiro Cátia1ORCID,Chadburn Helen1ORCID,Davis Aaron P.1ORCID,Hargreaves Serene1ORCID,Lucas Eve J.1,Schuiteman André1,Williams Emma1ORCID,Bachman Steven P.1ORCID,Baines David12,Barker Amy1,Budden Andrew P.1ORCID,Carretero Julia1,Clarkson James J.1,Roberts Alexandra1,Rivers Malin C.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond TW9 3AE, UK

2. College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Penryn, Cornwall, TR10 9FE

3. Botanic Gardens Conservation International, Richmond TW9 3BW, UK

Abstract

Herbarium specimens provide verifiable and citable evidence of the occurrence of particular plants at particular points in space and time, and are vital resources for assessing extinction risk in the tropics, where plant diversity and threats to plants are greatest. We reviewed approaches to assessing extinction risk in response to the Convention on Biological Diversity's Global Strategy for Plant Conservation Target 2: an assessment of the conservation status of all known plant species by 2020. We tested five alternative approaches, using herbarium-derived data for trees, shrubs and herbs in five different plant groups from temperate and tropical regions. All species were previously fully assessed for the IUCN Red List. We found significant variation in the accuracy with which different approaches classified species as threatened or not threatened. Accuracy was highest for the machine learning model (90%) but the least data-intensive approach also performed well (82%). Despite concerns about spatial, temporal and taxonomic biases and uncertainties in herbarium data, when specimens represent the best available evidence for particular species, their use as a basis for extinction risk assessment is appropriate, necessary and urgent. Resourcing herbaria to maintain, increase and disseminate their specimen data is essential to guide and focus conservation action. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Biological collections for understanding biodiversity in the Anthropocene’.

Funder

Toyota Motor Corporation

IUCN

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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