Open Research will be unavailable from 3am to 7am on Thursday 4th December 2025 AEDT due to scheduled maintenance.
 

Evolutionary biology in biodiversity science, conservation, and policy: A call to action

Date

Authors

Hendry, Andrew P.
Lohmann, Lucia G.
Conti, Elena
Cracraft, Joel
Crandall, Keith A.
Faith, Daniel P
Hauser, Christoph
Joly, Carlos A.
Kogure, Kazuhiro
Larigauderie, Anne

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Society for the Study of Evolution

Abstract

Evolutionary biologists have long endeavored to document how many species exist on Earth, to understand the processes by which biodiversity waxes and wanes, to document and interpret spatial patterns of biodiversity, and to infer evolutionary relationships. Despite the great potential of this knowledge to improve biodiversity science, conservation, and policy, evolutionary biologists have generally devoted limited attention to these broader implications. Likewise, many workers in biodiversity science have underappreciated the fundamental relevance of evolutionary biology. The aim of this article is to summarize and illustrate some ways in which evolutionary biology is directly relevant. We do so in the context of four broad areas: (1) discovering and documenting biodiversity, (2) understanding the causes of diversification, (3) evaluating evolutionary responses to human disturbances, and (4) implications for ecological communities, ecosystems, and humans. We also introduce bioGENESIS, a new project within DIVERSITAS launched to explore the potential practical contributions of evolutionary biology. In addition to fostering the integration of evolutionary thinking into biodiversity science, bioGENESIS provides practical recommendations to policy makers for incorporating evolutionary perspectives into biodiversity agendas and conservation. We solicit your involvement in developing innovative ways of using evolutionary biology to better comprehend and stem the loss of biodiversity.

Description

Citation

Source

Evolution

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31