Title: Gaps in marine taxonomy resources in Europe
1Gaps in marine taxonomy resources in Europe
- Leigh Marine Laboratory, University of Auckland,
New Zealand. - m.costello_at_auckland.ac.nz
- Ecological Consultancy Services Ltd (EcoServe),
Ireland -
- Muséum National dHistoire Naturelle, Paris,
France - National and Capodistrian University of Athens,
Greece
- Mark J. Costello
- Chris S. Emblow
- Philippe Bouchet
- Anastasios Legakis
2Taxonomic resources
- People taxonomists, identification skills
- Identification guides
- Collections of specimens
- Inventories of species
3This talk
- Aim what are gaps in taxonomic resources for
marine biodiversity in Europe? - What we did project, ouputs, scope
- Expectations
- What we found
- Implications for research and management
4The project European Register of Marine Species
- EU part-funded project
- 22 partner organisations
- 170 participating scientists
- 385,000 euro, 2 years
- communication with 42 organisations
- Data management plan
- Intellectual Property Rights Agreement
- Aim of external communications
- data exchange
- awareness of project
- invite end-user comments
- maximise synergy of effort, minimise overlap
- stimulate related activities
- foster collaboration
- promote use of results
5ERMS - outputs
- Web site providing results
- Book listing marine species
- Register of 600 experts (in 37 countries) in
European marine species identification - Bibliography of 840 identification guides
- Gaps in identification expertise and guides,
knowledge of species groups, and marine species
collections - New scientific society for the long term
management of biodiversity data (intellectual
property) - Model and foundation for future projects (e.g.
Fauna Europaea, BIOMARE, MARBEF)
Costello, M. J., Emblow, C and White R.
(editors) 2001. European Register of Marine
Species. A check-list of marine species in Europe
and a bibliography of guides to their
identification. Patrimoines naturels 50, 1-463.
ISBN 2-85653-538-0 ISSN 1281-6213
6ERMS scope
- North Pole to 26oN
- Mid-Atlantic Ridge to Black Sea
- 0.5 ppt to deep-sea
- Excluded
- Saltmarshes
- Lichens, diatoms, cyanobacteria, bacteria
7Our expectations
- species total 20,000 25,000
- identification guides decreasing adequacy with
smaller body size taxa - taxonomists - most 60-70 years of age
- collections most in museums
8How many species?
- Listed
- 30,000
- 4,000 omitted
- 2,000 to be described
- 36,000 total
- Experts under-estimated by 40-60 !
- 88 experts compiled species lists
- No Mediterranean lists for Rotifera and
Brachiopoda - No list for non-halacarid Acarina
9Weaker lists
- Preliminary lists
- Crytophytes
- heterotrophic euglenoids
- Haptophytes
- Prasinophytes
- Compiled from literature
- Apicomplexa (free-living species)
- Dinoflagellates
- Kathablepharids
- Placozoa
- Ctenophora
- Rotifera
- Hirudinea
- Thermosbaenacea
- Isopoda excluding Epicaridea
- Brachiopoda
- Appendicularia
- Cephalochordata
10Geographic coverage may be incomplete
- Protists
- Ciliates aloricate oligotrichs
- Ciliates Chonotricha
- Ciliates folliculinids
- Ciliates Rhynchodida
- Amoebae testate
- Apusomonads
- Choanoflagellates
- Euglenids - kinetoplastids
- Bicosoecids
- Labyrinthulids
- Thaustrochytrids
- Stramenopiles incertae sedis
- Thaumatomonads
- Protista incertae sedis (heterotrophic species)
- Amoebae naked
- Xenophyophora
- Non-protist
- Mesozoa
- Gnathostomulida
- Euphausiacea
- Hemichordata
- Fungi
- Porifera
- Siphonophora
- Chilopoda
- Diplopoda
- Insecta
- Phoronida
11Geographic coverage complete
- Arthropods
- Pycnogonida
- Remipedia
- Branchiura
- Cladocera
- Mystacocarida
- Copepoda
- Tantulocarida
- Cirripedia
- Decapoda
- Mysidacea
- Isopoda
- Insecta
- Stomatopoda
- Acarina
- Ostracoda
- Amphipoda
- Cumacea
- Tanaidacea
- Worms
- Cestoda
- Nemertea
- Acanthocephala
- Turbellaria
- Aspidogastrea
- Digenea
- Monogenea
- Oligochaeta
- Nematoda
- Polychaeta
- Pogonophora
- Foraminifera
- Actiniaria
- Antipatharia
- Hydrozoa
- Octocorallia
- Scleractinia
- Cubozoa
- Scyphozoa
- Ascidiacea
- Thaliacea
- Pisces
- Tetrapoda
- Bryozoa
- Cycliophora
- Entoprocta
- Echinodermata
- Other taxa
- Macroalgae
- Seagrass
- Chaetognatha
- Myxozoa
- Gastrotrichia
- Cephalorhyncha ( Loricifera, Priapulida,
Kinorhyncha, Nematomorpha) - Tardigrada
- Echiura
- Sipuncula
- Pentastomida
- Mollusca
12Rates of species discovery
All species
13Major benthic, some pelagic
14Meiofauna parasites
15Bryozoa in Europe and New Zealand
Europe
New Zealand
16Coverage of identification guides
- 842 guides
- 43 published in special series (e.g. Synopses
British Fauna)
- 58 Northern Europe
- 26 Mediterranean
- 11 Lusitanian - Macronesia
17Trends in publications of guides
18More guides/number species for more conspicuous
taxa
19Expertise
- Database 1,200 persons in 38 countries (29
European countries) - 614 respondents
- 80 employed in public sector (including
universities)
20Identification taxonomic expertise by taxa
Positive but poor correlations between
species/taxa and number of identificiation and
taxonomic experts
21Age structure of all experts
Average age 47 Range 23 to 89 Taxonomists older
than identification experts (ecologists?)
22State of specimen collections
- 500 questionnaires
- 80 institutes responsed
23State of specimen collections
- 60 managed by lt 4 staff
- ½ global coverage of species
- ¼ limited to national species
- 60 have type specimens
- 8 institutes gt 10,000 specimens
- 60 institutes lt 1,000 specimens
- How well catalogued?
- 20 - none
- 36 - complete
- 40 - no electronic
- 10 - full electronic
24Expectations and findings
- species
- 20,000 to 25,000
- taxonomists
- most 60-70 years of age
- identification guides
- decreasing adequacy with smaller body size taxa
- collections
- most in museums
- 36,000 !
- Average age 47
- True, but also less for southern European seas
- Most in universities, all poorly resourced,
catalogues insufficient
25Conclusions
- High rates discovery in these taxa
- most diverse least least well known
- thousands species remain to be discovered
- Know less conspicuous taxa least
- more guides required in these groups
- More ident guides for southern European species
- No evidence of taxonomists going extinct
- Collections not limited to museums, most poorly
catalogued - Awareness, knowledge inaccessible as not in
databases
26How to fill gaps?
- Revise and expand checklist (ERMS 2.0)
- Fund guides to southern European taxa
- Focus taxonomic and ecological studies on least
well known taxa in least well studied places