Plant Species - Threatened Or Invasive?
Posted on: Friday, 13 June 2008, 09:55 CDT
A new ecological study led by a University of Adelaide researcher should help identify species prone to extinction under environmental change, and species that are likely to become a pest.The study, the first of its kind, was published this week online in the British Ecological Society's prestigious Journal of Ecology.
"This study provides good evidence that we can take any group of species and predict how individual species will respond to changes in the environment through events such as climate change or habitat loss," says lead author Associate Professor Corey Bradshaw, from the University of Adelaide's School of Earth and Environmental Sciences.
The researchers analyzed life-history and ecological traits in more than 8900 species of the legume, or the Fabaceae, plant family and found a correlation between evolved species' traits and a particular susceptibility to a species becoming threatened or invasive.
"The urgency and scale of the global biodiversity crisis means we need good generalized predictors of a species' likelihood of going extinct or becoming invasive in non-native areas," says Associate Professor Bradshaw.
"Previous studies have been limited by studying one or other of these `fates' in isolation.
"Developing evidence-based rules of thumb for categorizing poorly studied species according to their susceptibility will aid decision makers in choosing best ways to allocate finite conservation resources."
Lists of `species to watch' - both threatened and potentially invasive - should be expanded based on ranking of `susceptibility traits', Associate Professor Bradshaw says . Associate Professor Bradshaw is also employed by the South Australian Research and Development Institute as a senior scientist.
"Our results are particularly valuable where there is sustained habitat loss or fragmentation, especially given the predictions that climate change will simultaneously promote the expansion of invasive alien species and greater extinction rates in others," he says.
Photo Courtesy Wikipedia
---
On the Net:
University of Adelaide
Journal of Ecology
Related Articles
- University Study Praises Educational Value of MySpace, Facebook
- American Medical Directors Association Foundation to Initiate Study of VeriMed Patient Identification System
- European Union Funded Newcastle University Study Preliminary Results Indicate Organic Foods Healthier, Safer: Four Year Study Finds Higher Levels of Antioxidants and Vitamin E in Milk From Organic Herds Versus Conventional Herds
- Misonix Highlights Recent Duke University Study Revealing Significant New Cancer Treatment May Be Possible With HIFU Technology
- Enjoy Your Coffee! U Says 6 Cups Daily Cuts Diabetes Risk: New Study Adds to Mounting Evidence of Java's Benefits
- Studies Show Copper Surfaces May Help Thwart ``Superbug'' Hospital Infections, Says Copper Development Association
- Columbia University Study Suggests Benefits of Zyflamend(R) in the Early Treatment of Prostate Cancer
- After Attack, St. Louis University Study Resumes Research of Peru Smelter
- Georgetown University Study Concludes Federal Association Health Plans Would Create Regulatory Vacuum and More Healthcare Fraud
- Paramedic Training Challenges Highlighted by University Study
User Comments (0)



RSS Feeds