Gaps in marine taxonomy resources in Europe Mark J. Costello Leigh Marine Laboratory, University of Auckland, New Zealand. m.costello@auckland.ac.nz Chris S. Emblow Ecological Consultancy Services Ltd (EcoServe), Ireland Philippe Bouchet Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France Anastasios Legakis National and Capodistrian University of Athens, Greece Taxonomic resources • People – taxonomists, identification skills • Identification guides • Collections of specimens • Inventories of species This 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 The 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 ERMS - 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 ERMS scope • North Pole to 26oN • Mid-Atlantic Ridge to • Black Sea 0.5 ppt to deep-sea Excluded • Saltmarshes • Lichens, diatoms, cyanobacteria, bacteria Our 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 How many species? • 88 experts compiled • • species lists No Mediterranean lists for Rotifera and Brachiopoda No list for non-halacarid Acarina Listed 30,000 + 4,000 omitted + 2,000 to be described 36,000 total • Experts under-estimated by 40-60% ! Weaker 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 Geographic coverage may be incomplete Non-protist • Mesozoa • Gnathostomulida • Euphausiacea • Hemichordata • Fungi • Porifera • Siphonophora • Chilopoda • Diplopoda • Insecta • Phoronida 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 Geographic coverage complete Arthropods • Pycnogonida • Remipedia • Branchiura • Cladocera • Mystacocarida • Copepoda • Tantulocarida • Cirripedia • Decapoda • Mysidacea • Isopoda • Insecta • Stomatopoda • Acarina • Ostracoda • Amphipoda • Cumacea • Tanaidacea Worms • Cestoda Other taxa • Nemertea • Acanthocephala • Macroalgae • Seagrass • Turbellaria • Aspidogastrea • Chaetognatha • Digenea • Myxozoa • Monogenea • Gastrotrichia • Oligochaeta • Cephalorhyncha (= Loricifera, • Nematoda Priapulida, • Polychaeta Kinorhyncha, Nematomorpha) • Pogonophora • • • • • Tardigrada Echiura Sipuncula Pentastomida Mollusca • Foraminifera • • • • • • • Actiniaria Antipatharia Hydrozoa Octocorallia Scleractinia Cubozoa Scyphozoa • • • • • • • Ascidiacea Thaliacea Pisces Tetrapoda Bryozoa Cycliophora Entoprocta Echinodermata • Rates of species discovery Aves, birds 100 0 1747 1768 1789 1810 1831 1852 1873 1894 1915 1936 1957 1978 1999 Ye a r 30000 All species 25000 Mammalia 20000 100 0 1747 1768 1789 1810 1831 1852 1873 1894 1915 1936 1957 1978 1999 15000 Y ear 10000 Osteichthyes, fish 5000 1500 0 1000 500 1750 1850 0 1747 1797 1847 1897 1947 1997 Y ear Year 1950 Major benthic, some pelagic Mollusca Siphonophora 4000 150 100 50 0 2000 0 1747 1768 1789 1810 1831 1852 1873 1894 1915 1936 1957 1978 1999 1747 1768 1789 1810 1831 1852 1873 1894 1915 1936 1957 1978 1999 Y ear Year Amphipoda Polychaeta 1500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 1000 500 0 1747 1768 1789 1810 1831 1852 1873 1894 1915 1936 1957 1978 1999 Ye a r 1747 1797 1847 1897 Y ear 1947 1997 Meiofauna parasites Turbellaria Nematoda parasitic 2000 400 1000 200 0 1747 1768 1789 1810 1831 1852 1873 1894 1915 1936 1957 1978 1999 0 Y ear 1747 1768 1789 1810 1831 1852 1873 1894 1915 1936 1957 1978 1999 Y ear Harpacticoida Myxozoa 2000 400 1000 200 0 1747 1768 1789 1810 1831 1852 1873 1894 1915 1936 1957 1978 1999 Year 0 1747 1768 1789 1810 1831 1852 1873 1894 1915 1936 1957 1978 1999 Ye a r Bryozoa in Europe and New Zealand 800 600 Number of Bryozoa described 400 Europe 200 0 1750 New Zealand 1850 Year 1950 Coverage of identification guides • 842 guides • 58% Northern Europe • 43% published in • 26% Mediterranean special series (e.g. Synopses British Fauna) • 11% Lusitanian Macronesia Trends in publications of guides 50 40 Number of publications 30 20 10 0 1900 1920 1940 1960 Publications per year 1980 2000 Mammalia Stomatopoda Aves Ctenophora Branchiopod Hirudinea Anthozoa Cirripedia Mysidacea Reptilia Brachiopoda Cumacea Pisces Decapoda Echinodermat Oligochaeta Scyphozoa Chaetognatha Chelicerata Mollusca Porifera Algae Tunicata Bryozoa Acanthoceph Amphipoda Fungi Polychaeta Hydrozoa Tanaidacea Gastrotricha Isopoda Plathelminthe Nemertea Ostracoda Copepoda Foraminifera Nematoda 0.00 More guides/number species for more conspicuous taxa 1.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00 6.00 Ratio identification guides to number of species 7.00 Expertise • Database 1,200 persons in 38 countries (29 European countries) • 614 respondents • 80% employed in public sector (including universities) Identification experts Taxonomic experts Linear (Identification experts) Linear (Taxonomic experts) 180 45 160 40 140 35 120 30 100 25 80 20 60 15 40 10 20 5 0 0 8000 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 No. of species 5000 6000 7000 No. of taxonomic experts No. of identification experts Identification & taxonomic expertise by taxa Positive but poor correlations between species/taxa and number of identificiation and taxonomic experts Age structure of all experts Average age = 47 30 Range 23 to 89 25 Taxonomists older than identification experts (=ecologists?) No. of respondents 20 15 10 5 0 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 Age - years 60 65 70 75 80 85 State of specimen collections • 500 questionnaires • 80 institutes responsed • ½ in universities ! Private Government University Society, NGO State of specimen collections • • • • • 60% managed by < 4 staff ½ global coverage of species ¼ limited to national species 60% have type specimens 8 institutes > 10,000 specimens • 60% institutes < 1,000 specimens How well catalogued? • • • • 20% - none 36% - complete 40% - no electronic 10% - full electronic Expectations and findings • species • 36,000 ! • taxonomists • Average age 47 – 20,000 to 25,000 – most 60-70 years of age • identification guides – decreasing adequacy with smaller body size taxa • collections – most in museums • True, but also less for southern European seas • Most in universities, all poorly resourced, catalogues insufficient Conclusions • 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 How to fill gaps? 1. Revise and expand checklist (ERMS 2.0) 2. Fund guides to southern European taxa 3. Focus taxonomic and ecological studies on least well known taxa in least well studied places