Today I Learned: 8.7 Million Species Are on Earth, and 86% Remain UnknownsteemCreated with Sketch.

in #til8 years ago (edited)

Scientists have cataloged under 15% of current living species, meaning that about 86% of Earth's species have yet to be found and categorized.

More species come into and out of existence before we can find out they existed. We can't seem to catch up.

speciesf03de.jpg
Species Collage

These are statistics that were calculated in 2011 and published in a study called "How Many Species Are There on Earth and in the Ocean?".

In 253 years of research into naming and describing species, started by Carl Linnaeus in 1758, there have been about 1.25 million species cataloged, with 1 million from the land and 250,000 from the ocean.

This study estimated there are 8.7 million species, with 6.5 million land species, 2.2 million ocean species, and extinction is accelerating for many. It's estimated the land species have 86% unknown, while oceanic species have 92%.

Prior to this study, the former estimations had a large margin of error, bing estimated at 3 to 100 million species on Earth. The new study has a margin of error of 1.3 million give or take.

And this study is not without it's criticism. Dan Bebber, an ecologist from the Earthwatch Institute, says the study used linear regression, which he says is the wrong technique for this type of data. He suggests the ordinal regression as a more accurate method of estimating the amount of species on earth.

Here are various methods of calculating the global number of species, and their limitations:

species-methods18116.png
Calculation Methodologies

"This work deduces the most basic number needed to describe our living biosphere," says co-author Boris Worm of Dalhousie University.

When applied to all five known eukaryote kingdoms of life on Earth:

kingdom-species75dc7.jpg
Species by Kingdom of Life

Total: 8.74 million eukaryote species on Earth.

  • 7.77 million species of animals (953,434 described and cataloged)
  • 298,000 species of plants (215,644 described and cataloged)
  • 611,000 species of fungi (43,271 described and cataloged)
  • 36,400 species of protozoa (8,118 described and cataloged)
  • 27,500 species of chromista (13,033 described and cataloged)

Another co-author, Alastair Simpson, said "We have only begun to uncover the tremendous variety of life around us."

Are we ever going to catch up and find all the Pokemon, I mean species, on the Earth? Traditional approaches to describing species could require up to 1,200 years, with over 300,000 taxonomists, with an estimated cost of $364 billion. But new techniques like DNA barcoding are reducing the costs and time to identify each species.

I wonder if we will be able to?

We are at the top of the spiral, the tip of the spear, moving forward and evolving with all the other life around us.

History-of-life-on-Earth-2f4b6d.jpg
Evolution of Life


Thank you for your time and attention! I appreciate the knowledge reaching more people. Take care. Peace.


References:


If you appreciate and value the content, please consider:

Upvoting, Sharing, and Resteeming below.

Follow me for more content to come!


@krnel
2016-12-20, 9am

Sort:  

This post has been ranked within the top 80 most undervalued posts in the second half of Dec 20. We estimate that this post is undervalued by $5.38 as compared to a scenario in which every voter had an equal say.

See the full rankings and details in The Daily Tribune: Dec 20 - Part II. You can also read about some of our methodology, data analysis and technical details in our initial post.

If you are the author and would prefer not to receive these comments, simply reply "Stop" to this comment.

I remember keeping an eye on Borneo in the news not too many years ago, it seems they were one of the bigger places new species kept getting discovered. I await Josh Gates to finally find the Yeti and really messed with the world's mind.

Species are changing too. So though some are not discovered some haven't appeared yet either. Which is pretty cool.

Yup, but we take over the world as if it's only ours and destroy their homes and their lives. We create extinction due to our self-centered perspective.

Yea its awful. Humans are incredibly out of touch with nature. It sucks.

interessante,valeu por partilhar estas informações.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.17
TRX 0.13
JST 0.027
BTC 61110.07
ETH 2731.78
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.45