[Taxacom] Biodiversity and Species Value
Doug Yanega
dyanega at ucr.edu
Thu Jun 10 18:23:42 CDT 2010
Stephen Thorpe wrote:
>sounds like you think all species are of equal "value", but surely
>one species of a megadiverse genus is far less important than a
>monotypic family? Why conserve just species? Why not all taxa? The
>higher the taxon, the more important it is. So a family going
>extinct is far more of a tragedy than just some species ...
Define "family" in a manner that is 100% objective and replicable
across all kingdoms. Higher taxa are artificial and abstract. The
Horsehoe Crab is unique and the sole member of a REALLY high level
taxon, but is at no risk of extinction. When its distribution shrinks
to a matter of acres, *then* you can claim it's a conservation
priority - the same priority as any other species with a similar
distribution, facing a similar risk. Conversely, there are hundreds
of species of Drosophila endemic to Hawaii, and most of them are at
risk of extinction due to very limited distributions. Oh, but they
happen to be members of a megadiverse genus, so I guess you claim
they are not worth protecting? So, by that logic, all I need to do to
protect them is declare that every species of Hawaiian Drosophila is
now in its own family, correct? That's got to be one of the worst
criteria imaginable. You can find dozens of cases of insect families
known 50 years ago that are presently ranked no higher than tribes,
and even MORE examples of the reverse. Does that mean that the former
are, at the stroke of a taxonomist's pen, no longer worthy of
conservation, while the latter suddenly *are*? Extinction does not
discriminate based on taxonomic rank, and neither should we. Extinct
is extinct.
Peace,
--
Doug Yanega Dept. of Entomology Entomology Research Museum
Univ. of California, Riverside, CA 92521-0314 skype: dyanega
phone: (951) 827-4315 (standard disclaimer: opinions are mine, not UCR's)
http://cache.ucr.edu/~heraty/yanega.html
"There are some enterprises in which a careful disorderliness
is the true method" - Herman Melville, Moby Dick, Chap. 82
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