NEW YORK, New York -- At least one-third of the species that inhabit the world's oceans
may remain completely unknown to science. That's despite the fact that
more species have been described in the last decade than in any previous
one, according to a report published online on November 15 in the Cell
Press publication Current Biology that details the first comprehensive
register of marine species of the world—a massive collaborative
undertaking by hundreds of experts around the globe.
The researchers estimate that the ocean may be
home to as many as one million species in all—likely not more. About
226,000 of those species have so far been described. There are another
65,000 species awaiting description in specimen collections.
"For the first time, we can
provide a very detailed overview of species richness, partitioned among
all major marine groups. It is the state of the art of what we know—and
perhaps do not know—about life in the ocean," says Ward Appeltans of the
Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) of UNESCO.
The findings provide a reference point for
conservation efforts and estimates of extinction rates, the researchers
say. They expect that the vast majority of unknown species—composed
disproportionately of smaller crustaceans, molluscs, worms, and
sponges—will be found this century.
Earlier estimates of ocean diversity had relied
on expert polls based on extrapolations from past rates of species
descriptions and other measures. Those estimates varied widely,
suffering because there was no global catalog of marine species.
Appeltans and colleagues including Mark Costello
from the University of Auckland have now built such an inventory. The
World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS) is an open-access, online
database (see http://www.marinespecies.org/)
created by 270 experts representing 146 institutions and 32 countries.
It is now 95% complete and is continually being updated as new species
are discovered.
"Building this was not as simple as it should
be, because there has not been any formal way to register species,"
Costello says.
A particular problem is the occurrence of
multiple descriptions and names for the same species—so called
"synonyms," Costello says. For instance, each whale or dolphin has on
average 14 different scientific names.
As those synonyms are discovered through careful
examination of records and specimens, the researchers expect perhaps
40,000 "species" to be struck from the list. But such losses will
probably be made up as DNA evidence reveals overlooked "cryptic"
species.
While fewer species live in the ocean than on land, marine life
represents much older evolutionary lineages that are fundamental to our
understanding of life on Earth, Appeltans says. And, in some sense,
WoRMS is only the start.
"This database provides an example of how other
biologists could similarly collaborate to collectively produce an
inventory of all life on Earth," Appeltans says.
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