Litcius/Paper detail

Indicators to monitor the status of the tree of life

Rikki Gumbs, Abhishek Chaudhary, Barnabas H. Daru, Daniel P. Faith, Félix Forest, Claudia L. Gray, Aida Kowalska, Who‐Seung Lee, Roseli Pellens, Sebastian Pipins, Laura J. Pollock, James Rosindell, Rosa A. Scherson, Nisha Owen

2023Conservation Biology20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Following the failure to fully achieve any of the 20 Aichi biodiversity targets, the future of biodiversity rests in the balance. The Convention on Biological Diversity's Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) presents the opportunity to preserve nature's contributions to people (NCPs) for current and future generations by conserving biodiversity and averting extinctions. There is a need to safeguard the tree of life-the unique and shared evolutionary history of life on Earth-to maintain the benefits it bestows into the future. Two indicators have been adopted within the GBF to monitor progress toward safeguarding the tree of life: the phylogenetic diversity (PD) indicator and the evolutionarily distinct and globally endangered (EDGE) index. We applied both to the world's mammals, birds, and cycads to show their utility at the global and national scale. The PD indicator can be used to monitor the overall conservation status of large parts of the evolutionary tree of life, a measure of biodiversity's capacity to maintain NCPs for future generations. The EDGE index is used to monitor the performance of efforts to conserve the most distinctive species. The risk to PD of birds, cycads, and mammals increased, and mammals exhibited the greatest relative increase in threatened PD over time. These trends appeared robust to the choice of extinction risk weighting. EDGE species had predominantly worsening extinction risk. A greater proportion of EDGE mammals (12%) had increased extinction risk compared with threatened mammals in general (7%). By strengthening commitments to safeguarding the tree of life, biodiversity loss can be reduced and thus nature's capacity to provide benefits to humanity now and in the future can be preserved.

Topics & Concepts

Threatened speciesBiodiversityExtinction (optical mineralogy)IUCN Red ListConvention on Biological DiversityEndangered speciesTree of life (biology)Phylogenetic diversityGeographySafeguardingGlobal biodiversityEcologyEnvironmental resource managementBiologyPhylogenetic treeEnvironmental scienceHabitatBiochemistryNursingGeneMedicinePaleontologySpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesPlant and animal studies