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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/15525
Title: The Magnitude of Global Marine Species Diversity
Authors: Ward Appeltans
Shane T. Ahyong
Gary Anderson
Martin V. Angel
Tom Artois
Nicolas Bailly
Roger Bamber
Anthony Barber
Ilse Bartsch
Annalisa Berta
Magdalena Błażewicz-Paszkowycz
Phil Bock
Geoff Boxshall
Christopher B. Boyko
Simone Nunes Brandão
Rod A. Bray
Niel L.Bruce
Stephen D. Cairns
Tin-Yam Chan 
Lanna Cheng
Allen G. Collins
Thomas Cribb
Marco Curini-Galletti
Farid Dahdouh-Guebas
Peter J.F. Davie
Michael N. Dawson
Olivier De Clerck
Wim Decock
Sammy De Grave
Nicole J. de Voogd
Daryl P. Domning
Christian C. Emig
Christer Erséus
William Eschmeyer
Kristian Fauchald
Daphne G. Fautin
Stephen W. Feist
Charles H.J.M. Fransen
Hidetaka Furuya
Oscar Garcia-Alvarez
Sarah Gerken
David Gibson
Arjan Gittenberger
Serge Gofas
Liza Gómez-Daglio
Dennis P. Gordon
Michael D. Guiry
Francisco Hernandez
Bert W. Hoeksema
Russell R. Hopcroft
Damià Jaume
Paul Kirk
Nico Koedam
Stefan Koenemann
Jürgen B. Kolb
Reinhardt M. Kristensen
Andreas Kroh
Gretchen Lambert
David B. Lazarus
Rafael Lemaitre
Matt Longshaw
Jim Lowry
Enrique Macpherson
Laurence P. Madin
Christopher Mah
Gill Mapstone
Patsy A. McLaughlin
Jan Mees
Kenneth Meland
Charles G. Messing
Claudia E. Mills
Tina N. Molodtsova
Rich Mooi
Birger Neuhaus
Peter K.L. Ng
Claus Nielsen
Jon Norenburg
Dennis M. Opresko
Masayuki Osawa
Gustav Paulay
William Perrin
John F. Pilger
Gary C.B. Poore
Phil Pugh
Geoffrey B. Read
James D. Reimer
Marc Rius
Rosana M. Rocha
José I. Saiz-Salinas
Victor Scarabino
Bernd Schierwater
Andreas Schmidt-Rhaesa
Kareen E. Schnabel
Marilyn Schotte
Peter Schuchert
Enrico Schwabe
Hendrik Segers
Caryn Self-Sullivan
Noa Shenkar
Volker Siegel
Wolfgang Sterrer
Sabine Stöhr
Billie Swalla
Mark L. Tasker
Erik V. Thuesen
Tarmo Timm
M. Antonio Todaro
Xavier Turon
Seth Tyler
Peter Uetz
Jacob van der Land
Bart Vanhoorne
Leen P. van Ofwegen
Rob W.M. van Soest
Jan Vanaverbeke
Genefor Walker-Smith
T. ChadWalter
Alan Warren
Gary C. Williams
Simon P. Wilson
Mark J. Costello
Issue Date: 4-Dec-2012
Publisher: ScienceDirect
Journal Volume: 22
Journal Issue: 23
Start page/Pages: 2189-2202
Source: Current Biology
Abstract: 
The most widely used metric of biodiversity is species richness, and much has been written about how many species may exist on land and in the sea [1, 2, 3]. Recent estimates of the number of extant described marine species vary from 150,000 to 274,000, and of those that may exist from 300,000 to over 10 million [4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14] (Table 1). Most of these estimates were made without the benefit of a global inventory of known marine species. The former estimates were based on experts’ polls. The latter were based on extrapolation from past rates of description of species and higher taxa, proportions of undescribed species in samples, proportions that well-known taxa may represent of regional biota, and numbers of species in samples (Table 1). Here, we report on the near completion of such an inventory. The World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS) is an open-access online database created by an editorial board of 270 taxonomists from 146 institutions in 32 countries [15]. The first goal of WoRMS has been the compilation of a list of all taxonomically accepted marine species, commonly used synonyms, and key literature sources. Beyond complete taxonomic coverage, the longer-term aim is to provide or link to data on species distributions, biology, ecology, images, and guides to their identification. An important side benefit is that it facilitates communication within and beyond the taxonomic community, which can lead to increased rates of discovery of species and synonyms and a reduced rate of creation of new synonyms (and homonyms).
URI: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/15525
ISSN: 0960-9822
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2012.09.036
Appears in Collections:海洋生物研究所

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