Litcius/Paper detail

Conserving avian evolutionary history can effectively safeguard future benefits for people

Rikki Gumbs, Claudia L. Gray, Michael Hoffmann, Rafael Molina‐Venegas, Nisha Owen, Laura J. Pollock

2023Science Advances18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Phylogenetic diversity (PD)-the evolutionary history of a set of species-is conceptually linked to the maintenance of yet-to-be-discovered benefits from biodiversity or "option value." We used global phylogenetic and utilization data for birds to test the PD option value link, under the assumption that the performance of sets of PD-maximizing species at capturing known benefits is analogous to selecting the same species at a point in human history before these benefits were realized. PD performed better than random at capturing utilized bird species across 60% of tests, with performance linked to the phylogenetic dispersion and prevalence of each utilization category. Prioritizing threatened species for conservation by the PD they encapsulate performs comparably to prioritizing by their functional distinctiveness. However, species selected by each metric show low overlap, indicating that we should conserve both components of biodiversity to effectively conserve a variety of uses. Our findings provide empirical support for the link between evolutionary history and benefits for future generations.

Topics & Concepts

SafeguardBusinessComputer scienceRisk analysis (engineering)Environmental planningComputer securityEnvironmental scienceInternational tradeWildlife Ecology and ConservationSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeAnimal Ecology and Behavior Studies