Human activity reduces plant diversity hundreds of kilometres away
Nature has published the international study in which the Biodiversity and Evolution research group of the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) was involved. Its authors describe the results as “alarming”
2025-05-15
(Press-News.org)
The study, in which the Biodiversity and Evolution Research Group of the UPV/EHU’s Faculty of Science and Technology participated, was carried out within the framework of the international DarkDivNet network and focused on nearly 5,500 locations in 119 regions across the world. In each location studied, the research teams analysed all the plant species present in different habitats to identify dark diversity. This innovative methodology for studying biodiversity made it possible to estimate the potential plant diversity in each study site and compare it with the plants actually present.
The results reveal a hitherto unknown effect of human activities on biodiversity. In regions with little human impact, natural habitats contain on average one third of the potential species, mainly because not all the species can spread throughout the area naturally. By contrast, in regions with a high human impact, habitats tend to include only one fifth of the potential species. Traditional methods for estimating biodiversity, based on counting the number of species present without taking potential species into consideration, tend to underestimate the true effect of human impact.
The Gorbeia Nature Reserve
Based on the original idea of Professor Meelis Pärtel of the University of Tartu and lead author of the study, the DarkDivNet network was launched in 2018. Since then, research groups from all over the world have been gradually joining in order to gather samples in as many regions of the planet as possible. A case in point was the UPV/EHU’s scientific team formed by Idoia Biurrun-Galarraga and Juan Antonio Campos-Prieto, lecturers in the Botany section of the Department of Plant Biology and Ecology; they chose the Gorbeia Nature Reserve as the setting for sampling 55 study sites, targeting beech forests and moors as habitats. The work took five years to complete and had to contend with the COVID-19 pandemic and political crises in many countries within the network.
The degree of human impact in each region was measured using the Human Footprint Index, based on factors such as population density, changes in land use and infrastructure construction (roads). The study showed that the human footprint index negatively affects plant diversity in a locality within a radius of several hundred kilometres. The authors pointed out that the results “are alarming because they show that human disturbance exerts a much greater impact than initially thought, even reaching protected areas far from the source of human impact. Pollution, deforestation, overgrazing and forest fires can exclude plant species from their natural habitats, preventing them from recolonising”. The researchers also pointed out that “the negative influence of human activity was less pronounced when at least one third of a region's area remained well preserved, which supports the global goal of protecting 30% of the planet's surface”.
In conclusion, this study highlights the importance of maintaining healthy ecosystems beyond nature reserves and emphasises the concept of dark diversity as a useful tool for assessing the status of ecosystems undergoing restoration, identifying species that have a preference for a particular habitat but are not yet present in it.
Reference
Pärtel, M., R. Tamme, C. P. Carmona, K. Riibak, M. Moora, … I. Biurrun, … J.A. Campos,… and M. Zobel (2025) "Global impoverishment of natural vegetation revealed by dark diversity." Nature. DOI: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08814-5
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-05-15
Korea University College of Medicine (KUCM) has been selected as one of the awardee institutions for the 2025 Interdisciplinary Physician-Scientist Training Program, supported by the Ministry of Health and Welfare (MOHW) and the Korea Health Industry Development Institute (KHIDI). In this initiative, KUCM formed a consortium with the Hanyang College of Medicine, Chungbuk National University College of Medicine, and Yeungnam University College of Medicine, receiving KRW 3 billion or approximately USD 2.3 million in funding ...
2025-05-15
“Virus exposure linked to Neurodegeneration”
Professor Ok Sarah Shin's Team at Korea University College of Medicine Finds Clues to treat neurodegenerative diseases with Therapeutic Candidate “ALT001”
A unique mechanism triggering Alzheimer's disease draws attention: viral infection—while ALT001 confirmed to alleviate neuroinflammation and suppress viral replication
Studies suggesting that certain viral infections may influence the onset of Alzheimer's diseases are gaining attention. In this context, a domestic research team has succeeded in breaking the link between viral infection and Alzheimer's disease using a new treatment candidate.
Dr. ...
2025-05-15
With the vigorous development and widespread application of 5-G technology, electromagnetic waves have significantly improved the convenience for humans and society. Meanwhile, electromagnetic wave pollution has attracted extensive concerns, which not only causes distortion of precision instruments but also threatens human health. Therefore, the design and development of efficient electromagnetic wave-absorbing materials have garnered extensive attention from the scientific community. Most researchers have devoted to exploring bifunctional electromagnetic wave-absorbing materials, such as thermal insulation, anti-corrosion (inorganic corrosion) properties, etc, while excellent electromagnetic ...
2025-05-15
GRIT remaps the world’s rivers, branching into the unknown to aid global flood modelling
Key research findings
GRIT is the first global river network to include river splits, canals, and multi-threaded channels—features that were missing from previous reference datasets.
The network includes 19.6 million km of mapped rivers and 67 thousand bifurcations, with accurate flow directions and channel data.
It is already outperforming previous river models in terms of accuracy, especially in flat, flood-prone, or heavily populated areas.
A team led by researchers at the University of Oxford has created the most complete map of the world’s rivers ever made offering ...
2025-05-15
As concern grows over adolescent mental health, a new national study adds to the growing body of research showing that cyberbullying should be considered an adverse childhood experience (ACE) – a category of childhood trauma linked to long-term emotional, psychological and physical harm.
While many assume that only extreme forms of online harassment – like threats or identity-based attacks – can cause significant harm, the findings suggest a more troubling reality: even less visible or indirect forms of cyberbullying ...
2025-05-15
The low-threshold, playful communication of complex scientific content is a challenge. A team from the Game Lab Graz at the Institute of Human-Centred Computing at Graz University of Technology (TU Graz) has developed a solution for this. The learning environment Project Chimera, implemented as a computer game, enables gamified, story-based learning of more complex content from the fields of science and technology. Funded by an Epic Mega Grant from software and games developer Epic Games (Fortnite, Unreal Engine), a team led by Johanna Pirker and Saeed Safikhani has created a virtual 3D ...
2025-05-15
VENICE – A team of researchers led by Niccolò Maffezzoli, “Marie Curie” fellow at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice and the University of California, Irvine, and an associate member of the Institute of Polar Sciences of the National Research Council of Italy, has developed the first global model based on artificial intelligence to calculate the ice thickness distribution of all the glaciers on Earth. The model has been published in the journal Geoscientific Model Development and is expected to become a reference tool for those studying future glacier melt scenarios.
Accurate knowledge of glacier volumes is essential for projecting future sea level ...
2025-05-15
Found in knee replacements and bone plates, aircraft components, and catalytic converters, the exceptionally strong metals known as multiple principal element alloys (MPEA) are about to get even stronger through to artificial intelligence.
Sanket Deshmukh, associate professor in chemical engineering, and his team have designed a new MPEA with superior mechanical properties using a data-driven framework that leverages the supercomputing power of explainable artificial intelligence (AI). Their findings, supported by funding from the National Science Foundation, were recently published in Nature’s npj Computational ...
2025-05-15
Researchers from the University of Tokyo have found a way to observe clotting activity in blood as it happens — without needing invasive procedures. Using a new type of microscope and artificial intelligence (AI), their study shows how platelet clumping can be tracked in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), opening the door to safer, more personalized treatment.
If you've ever cut yourself, you’ve seen platelets in action — these tiny blood cells are like emergency repair workers, rushing to plug the damage and stop ...
2025-05-15
A breakthrough study has revealed why emerging electric aircraft engine technology sounds so annoying — and how to fix it.
Scientists at the University of Bristol in collaboration with the University of Salford have uncovered the root cause behind the particularly irritating noise produced by boundary layer ingesting (BLI) engines — a key technology in future electric and hybrid aircraft.
Building on earlier work that identified general noise sources in BLI systems, this latest research, published today in Nature npj Acoustics, dives deeper into the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Human activity reduces plant diversity hundreds of kilometres away
Nature has published the international study in which the Biodiversity and Evolution research group of the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) was involved. Its authors describe the results as “alarming”