Document of bibliographic reference 339222

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Natural history collections recapitulate 200 years of faunal change
Abstract
Changing species assemblages represent major challenges to ecosystems around the world. Retracing these changes is limited by our knowledge of past biodiversity. Natural history collections represent archives of biodiversity and are therefore an unparalleled source to study biodiversity changes. In the present study, we tested the value of natural history collections for reconstructing changes in the abundance and presence of species over time. In total, we scrutinized 17 080 quality-checked records for 242 epibenthic invertebrate species from the North and Baltic Seas collected throughout the last 200 years. Our approaches identified eight previously reported species introductions, 10 range expansions, six of which are new to science, as well as the long-term decline of 51 marine invertebrate species. The cross-validation of our results with published accounts of endangered species and neozoa of the area confirmed the results for two of the approaches for 49 to 55% of the identified species, and contradicted our results for 9 to 10%. The results based on relative record trends were less validated. We conclude that, with the proper approaches, natural history collections are an unmatched resource for recovering early species introductions and declines.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000640894500001
Bibliographic citation
Ewers-Saucedo, C.; Allspach, A.; Barilaro, C.; Bick, A.; Brandt, A.; Fiege, D.; Füting, S.; Hausdorf, B.; Hayer, S.; Husemann, M.; Joger, U.; Kamcke, C.; Küster, M.; Lohrmann, V.; Martin, I.; Michalik, P.; Reinicke, G.-B.; Schwentner, M.; Stiller, M.; Brandis, D. (2021). Natural history collections recapitulate 200 years of faunal change. Royal Society Open Science 8(4): 201983. https://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201983
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Christine Ewers-Saucedo
author
Name
Andreas Allspach
author
Name
Christina Barilaro
author
Name
Andreas Bick
author
Name
Angelika Brandt
author
Name
Dieter Fiege
author
Name
Susanne Füting
author
Name
Bernhard Hausdorf
author
Name
Sarah Hayer
author
Name
Martin Husemann
author
Name
Ulrich Joger
author
Name
Claudia Kamcke
author
Name
Mathias Küster
author
Name
Volker Lohrmann
author
Name
Ines Martin
author
Name
Peter Michalik
author
Name
Götz-Bodo Reinicke
author
Name
Martin Schwentner
author
Name
Michael Stiller
author
Name
Dirk Brandis

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201983

Document metadata

date created
2021-06-22
date modified
2021-07-07