地球生命の新シミュレーションが未発見種の多様性を明らかに(New Simulation of Life on Earth Reveals Hidden Diversity of Undiscovered Species)

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2025-03-31 インペリアル・カレッジ・ロンドン(ICL)

インペリアル・カレッジ・ロンドンなどの研究者チームは、新しいシミュレーション手法を開発し、地球上の生物多様性のパターンを解明しました。このモデルは、地球上の陸生動物の種数や新種の進化速度を計算し、未知の種を含めて100万から300万の陸生動物種が存在すると推定しています。また、小型動物ほど新種の進化速度が高く、同程度のサイズでは肉食動物が最も高い進化率を示すことが分かりました。このシミュレーションは、マドングレーモデルと中立理論を初めて組み合わせたもので、将来的には気候変動や生息地喪失が生物多様性に与える影響の予測に貢献することが期待されています。

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生態学理論の統合から見えてきた陸上動物の種の豊富さと種分化率 Species Richness and Speciation Rates for all Terrestrial Animals Emerge from a Synthesis of Ecological Theories

Lucas D Fernandes, Rogier E Hintzen, Samuel E D Thompson, Tatsiana Barychka, Derek Tittensor, Michael Harfoot, Tim Newbold, James Rosindell
Systematic Biology  Published:28 March 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syaf006

Abstract

The total number of species on earth and the rate at which new species are created are fundamental questions for ecology, evolution and conservation. These questions have typically been approached separately, despite their obvious interconnection. In this study, we approach both questions in conjunction, for all terrestrial animals. To do this, we combine two previously unconnected bodies of theory: general ecosystem models and individual-based ecological neutral theory. General ecosystem models provide us with estimated numbers of individual organisms, separated by functional group and body size. Neutral theory, applied within a guild of functionally similar individuals, connects species richness, speciation rate, and number of individual organisms. In combination, for terrestrial endotherms where species numbers are known, they provide us with estimates for speciation rates as a function of body size and diet class. Extrapolating the same rates to guilds of ectotherms enables us to estimate the species richness of those groups, including species yet to be described. We find that speciation rates per species per million years decrease with increasing body size. Rates are also higher for carnivores compared to omnivores or herbivores of the same body size. Our estimate for the total number of terrestrial species of animals is in the range 1.03-2.92 million species, a value consistent with estimates from previous studies, despite having used a fundamentally new approach. Perhaps what is most remarkable about these results is that they have been obtained using only limited data from larger endotherms and their speciation rates, with the predictive process being based on mechanistic theory. This work illustrates the potential of a new approach to classic eco-evolutionary questions, while also adding weight to existing predictions. As we now face an era of dramatic biological change, new methods will be needed to mechanistically model global biodiversity at the species and individual organism level. This will be a huge challenge but the combination of general ecosystem models and neutral theory that we introduce here is a way to tractably achieve it.

生物工学一般
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