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201313Jan10:26

Bugs reveal the rich­ness of species on Earth

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 13 Jan­u­ary 2013 | mod­i­fied 13 Jan­u­ary 2013
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Forest canopy raftAn inter­na­tional team of researchers has car­ried out a sur­vey of the bio­log­i­cal diver­sity in a trop­i­cal rain­for­est. Their efforts have helped them find the key to one of the exis­ten­tial ques­tions to which peo­ple have long sought an answer: how many species exist on Earth?

Nor­way has just recently endorsed the goals of the new inter­na­tional strat­egy for bio­di­ver­sity to 2020. The find­ings of Dr Ødegaard’s research team come at a very con­ve­nient time in terms of our com­mit­ments to see­ing the strat­egy through,” says Per Backe-​Hansen of the Research Coun­cil of Nor­way.
The Research Coun­cil co-​financed Dr Ødegaard’s par­tic­i­pa­tion in the project from 2007 to 2009. Øde­gaard was the sole Nor­we­gian involved in the project and one of the prime movers behind the study. The results of the study have been pub­lished in the Decem­ber 14 issue of the jour­nal Sci­ence.


The sig­nif­i­cance of arthro­pods
How many species inhabit the Earth is a long­stand­ing ques­tion. There is no lack of cal­cu­la­tions or mod­els which attempt to pro­vide an answer; the prob­lem has been the absence of empir­i­cal data.

After nearly ten years of work, we have deter­mined that Panama’s San Lorenzo for­est is home to 25,000 arthro­pods. This is the very key to resolv­ing the ques­tion of how many species there are in the world
Dr Frode Øde­gaard, Nor­we­gian Insti­tute for Nature Research (NINA) »


The pri­mary source of uncer­tainty in cal­cu­lat­ing the answer has been the sta­tus of arthro­pods. “Arthro­pod” (phy­lum Arthro­poda) is a col­lec­tive term com­pris­ing insects, arach­nids, and crus­taceans, com­monly referred to in the ver­nac­u­lar as “bugs”. Although arthro­pods make up the major­ity of all liv­ing ani­mal species, lit­tle is known about their true num­bers.

Know­ing that arthro­pods com­prise approx­i­mately 70 per cent of all liv­ing species, and that the vast major­ity of them live in trop­i­cal rain­forests, it makes per­fect sense that you carry out a cen­sus of all the bugs in the rain­for­est to find an answer to the over­rid­ing ques­tion. This is pre­cisely what the researchers have done.

The rain­for­est holds the key
Frode Øde­gaard and his inter­na­tional team of 102 researchers went directly to the source. And this led them to the core of the mys­tery. After 10 years of exam­in­ing every inch of the San Lorenzo for­est in Panama, from the for­est floor to the top of the for­est canopy, the researchers have col­lected and iden­ti­fied 130,000 bugs rep­re­sent­ing over 6,000 dif­fer­ent species.

The researchers used var­i­ous devices and solu­tions for canopy access to help them col­lect the arthro­pods. A con­struc­tion crane was built in the for­est to allow access to dif­fer­ent lev­els of the for­est. Fur­ther­more an inflat­able tree raft about the size of a foot­ball field that sat atop the for­est canopy was used, next to a hot air balloon-​style sys­tem.

A large por­tion of all species dis­cov­ered in the for­est were found in a rather small area — a for­tu­itous devel­op­ment for the researchers.

What this means, basi­cally, is that we can deter­mine the diver­sity of species within a trop­i­cal for­est by exam­in­ing smaller areas and then extrap­o­lat­ing the find­ings,” Dr Øde­gaard explains.

A greater diver­sity of flora means more species
Yet another inter­est­ing result of the study is that the num­ber of arthro­pods can be deter­mined based on the num­ber of plants liv­ing in the for­est. This greatly sim­pli­fies the cen­sus work. Sur­pris­ingly, this also applies to non-​herbivores. This find­ing lends sup­port to ear­lier the­o­ries that pos­tu­late that the rich­ness of species increases in cor­re­la­tion with the diver­sity of plant life.

The researchers dis­cov­ered that for every species of plant found, there would be 20 species of arthro­pod. Sim­i­larly, there are 83 arthro­pods per species of bird and 312 per species of mam­mal.

Now that we know the answer, what is the ques­tion?
While we may have found the answer, we still need to deter­mine the real ques­tion. Why is it so impor­tant to pro­tect all these species? The list of eco­log­i­cal, polit­i­cal and eth­i­cal argu­ments for why we should safe­guard bio­di­ver­sity is long and all the argu­ments are sound. Accord­ing to Dr Øde­gaard, the most impor­tant argu­ment is that the human race is entirely depen­dent on diver­sity in nature.

We can think of it in terms of being on an aero­plane. The Earth is the plane and the species are the bolts hold­ing the machine together. Some of these bolts are more impor­tant than oth­ers. We can lose some of the bolts, but if too many go miss­ing the plane is going to crash.”

Encour­ag­ing ecol­o­gists to think big
This study has shown that the time has come to think big,” Frode Øde­gaard says. Only by means of large-​scale col­lab­o­ra­tion projects will we be able to gain insight into exis­ten­tial ques­tions of this type. Pre­vi­ous exam­ples include the col­lab­o­ra­tive efforts to map the human genome and under­stand the nucleus of the atom at CERN.

Frode Øde­gaard has already embarked upon follow-​up research. He and the rest of the team are cur­rently in Papua, New Guinea com­par­ing the cal­cu­la­tions from Panama with find­ings on another con­ti­nent. They are inves­ti­gat­ing issues such as how diver­sity pro­gresses in higher ter­rains.


The above news item is reprinted from mate­ri­als avail­able at The Research Coun­cil of Nor­way and KUER Research News. Orig­i­nal text may be edited for con­tent and length.
(Source: The Research Coun­cil of Norway|News, 07.01.2013; KUER Research News, 14.12.2012; IBISCA pro­gramme)
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