Drivers of species knowledge across the tree of life

Author:

Mammola Stefano123ORCID,Adamo Martino34ORCID,Antić Dragan5,Calevo Jacopo67ORCID,Cancellario Tommaso1,Cardoso Pedro2,Chamberlain Dan4,Chialva Matteo34ORCID,Durucan Furkan8ORCID,Fontaneto Diego13ORCID,Goncalves Duarte9ORCID,Martínez Alejandro1,Santini Luca10,Rubio-Lopez Iñigo1ORCID,Sousa Ronaldo11ORCID,Villegas-Rios David12ORCID,Verdes Aida13ORCID,Correia Ricardo A14151617

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Ecology Group (MEG), Water Research Institute (CNR-IRSA), National Research Council

2. Laboratory for Integrative Biodiversity Research (LIBRe), Finnish Museum of Natural History (LUOMUS), University of Helsinki

3. National Biodiversity Future Center

4. Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology, University of Turin

5. University of Belgrade - Faculty of Biology

6. Royal Botanic Gardens

7. School of Molecular and Life Sciences, Curtin University

8. Department of Aquaculture, Isparta University of Applied Sciences

9. CIIMAR, Interdisciplinary Centre of Marine and Environmental Research, University of Porto

10. Department of Biology and Biotechnologies “Charles Darwin”, Sapienza University of Rome

11. CBMA – Centre of Molecular and Environmental Biology, Department of Biology, University of Minho

12. Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas, CSIC, Eduardo Cabello

13. Department of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales

14. Helsinki Lab of Interdisciplinary Conservation Science (HELICS), Department of Geosciences and Geography, University of Helsinki

15. Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS), University of Helsinki

16. CESAM – Centre for Environmental and Marine Studies, University of Aveiro

17. Biodiversity Unit, University of Turku

Abstract

Knowledge of biodiversity is unevenly distributed across the Tree of Life. In the long run, such disparity in awareness unbalances our understanding of life on Earth, influencing policy decisions and the allocation of research and conservation funding. We investigated how humans accumulate knowledge of biodiversity by searching for consistent relationships between scientific (number of publications) and societal (number of views in Wikipedia) interest, and species-level morphological, ecological, and sociocultural factors. Across a random selection of 3019 species spanning 29 Phyla/Divisions, we show that sociocultural factors are the most important correlates of scientific and societal interest in biodiversity, including the fact that a species is useful or harmful to humans, has a common name, and is listed in the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List. Furthermore, large-bodied, broadly distributed, and taxonomically unique species receive more scientific and societal attention, whereas colorfulness and phylogenetic proximity to humans correlate exclusively with societal attention. These results highlight a favoritism toward limited branches of the Tree of Life, and that scientific and societal priorities in biodiversity research broadly align. This suggests that we may be missing out on key species in our research and conservation agenda simply because they are not on our cultural radar.

Funder

Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Università e della Ricerca

Academy of Finland

KONE Foundation

Ministry of Science and Innovation

Foundation for Science and Technology

Serbian Ministry of Science, Technological Development and Innovation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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