Odonata enter the biodiversity crisis debate: The first global assessment of an insect group

The status and trends of global biodiversity are often measured with a bias towards datasets limited to terrestrial vertebrates. The first global assessment of an insect order (Odonata) provides new context to the ongoing discussion of current biodiversity loss. A randomly selected sample of 1500 (2...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological conservation 2009-08, Vol.142 (8), p.1864-1869
Hauptverfasser: Clausnitzer, Viola, Kalkman, Vincent J., Ram, Mala, Collen, Ben, Baillie, Jonathan E.M., Bedjanič, Matjaž, Darwall, William R.T., Dijkstra, Klaas-Douwe B., Dow, Rory, Hawking, John, Karube, Haruki, Malikova, Elena, Paulson, Dennis, Schütte, Kai, Suhling, Frank, Villanueva, Reagan J., von Ellenrieder, Natalia, Wilson, Keith
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container_end_page 1869
container_issue 8
container_start_page 1864
container_title Biological conservation
container_volume 142
creator Clausnitzer, Viola
Kalkman, Vincent J.
Ram, Mala
Collen, Ben
Baillie, Jonathan E.M.
Bedjanič, Matjaž
Darwall, William R.T.
Dijkstra, Klaas-Douwe B.
Dow, Rory
Hawking, John
Karube, Haruki
Malikova, Elena
Paulson, Dennis
Schütte, Kai
Suhling, Frank
Villanueva, Reagan J.
von Ellenrieder, Natalia
Wilson, Keith
description The status and trends of global biodiversity are often measured with a bias towards datasets limited to terrestrial vertebrates. The first global assessment of an insect order (Odonata) provides new context to the ongoing discussion of current biodiversity loss. A randomly selected sample of 1500 (26.4%) of the 5680 described dragonflies and damselflies was assessed using IUCN’s Red List criteria. Distribution maps for each species were created and species were assigned to habitat types. These data were analysed in respect to threat level for regions and habitat types. We have found that one in 10 species of dragonflies and damselflies is threatened with extinction. This threat level is among the lowest of groups that have been assessed to date, suggesting that previous estimates of extinction risk for insects might be misleading. However, Odonata only comprise a small invertebrate order, with above-average dispersal ability and relatively wide distribution ranges. For conservation science and policy to be truly representative of global biodiversity a representative cross-section of invertebrates needs to be included.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.biocon.2009.03.028
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subjects Anisoptera (Odonata)
Biodiversity indicators
Conservation status
freshwater
Freshwater (health/environment)
Global assessment
habitats
insect ecology
IUCN
Odonata
species diversity
Threatened species
Zygoptera
title Odonata enter the biodiversity crisis debate: The first global assessment of an insect group
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