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http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/3426
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| Title: | Conservation of protists: is it needed at all? |
| Authors: | Cotterill, F.P.D. AL-Rasheid, Kahled Foissner, Wilhelm |
| Keywords: | Biodiversity Genetic Resources Habitat Loss Idiographic and nomothetic science Protist Protection Type locality Taxonomic Inventories Conservation Zoology |
| تاريخ النشر: | 2007 |
| Publisher: | Springer Science+Business Media B.V. |
| Citation: | Biodivers Conserv: vol 17; 427–443 |
| Abstract: | Protists have scarcely been considered in traditional perspectives and strategies
in environmental management and biodiversity conservation. This is a remarkable omission
given that these tiny organisms are highly diverse, and have performed as key ecological
players in evolutionary theatres for over a billion years of Earth history. Protists hold
key roles in nearly all ecosystems, notably as participants in Xuxes of energy and matter
through foodwebs that centre on their predation on microbes. In spite of this, they have
been largely ignored in conservation issues due to a widespread, naive belief that protists
are ubiquitous and cosmopolitanously distributed. Nevertheless, recent research shows that
many protists have markedly restricted distributions. These range from palaeoendemics
(Gondwanan-Laurasian distribution) to local endemics. Our ignorance about the ultimate
and proximate causes of such acute disparities in scale-dependent distributions of protists
can be Xagged as a singular reason to preserve these more cryptic participants in ecological
and evolutionary dynamics. This argument is disturbing when one considers anthropogenic
modiWcations of landscapes and the very poorly understood roles of protists in ecological
processes in soils, not least in agroecolandscapes and hydrological systems. Major concerns
include host speciWc symbiotic, symphoric and parasitic species which become extinct, unseen and largely unknown, alongside their metazoan hosts; change or loss of
habitats; massive change or loss of type localities; and losses of unique genetic resources
and evolutionary potential. These concerns are illustrated by examples to argue that conservation
of protists should be integral to any strategy that traditionally targets vascular plants
and animals. The ongoing decline in research capacity to inventory and classify protist
diversity exempliWes a most acute symptom of the failures, at local, national and international
levels, to support scientiWc responses to the biodiversity crisis. Responsible
responses to these severe problems need to centre on the revival of natural history as the core discipline in biology. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/3426 |
| يظهر في المجموعات: | College of Science
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جميع جميع الابحاث محمية بموجب حقوق الطباعة، جميع الحقوق محفوظة.
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