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March 20, 2007 BIOLOGISTS PRODUCE GLOBAL MAP OF PLANT BIODIVERSITY Biologists at the The map, which accompanies a study published in this week's early online issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, highlights areas of particular concern for conservation. It also, the scientists say, provides much needed assistance in gauging the likely impact of climate change on the services plants provide to humans. Walter Jetz of UCSD and Holger Kreft of the “Plants provide important services to humans—such as ornaments, structure, food and bio-molecules that can be used for the development of drugs or alternative fuels—that increase in value with their richness,” says Jetz, an assistant professor of biology at UCSD and the senior author of the paper. “Tropical countries such as While explorers to these tropical regions long ago recognized this increased diversity over more temperate regions, the general understanding among ecologists about this striking difference continues to be very limited. “Given that we are far off from knowing the individual distributions of the world's 300,000 odd plant species,” says Jetz. “Holger Kreft and I investigated how well the richness of plants can be predicted from environmental conditions alone.” Combining field-survey based species counts from over a thousand regions worldwide with high-resolution environmental data, the scientists were able to accurately capture the factors that promote high species richness of plants. “Climate change may drive to extinction plants that hold important cures before we find them,” says Kreft, a biologist at the Nees Institute for Biodiversity of Plants at the
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