PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Triage for plants: NYBG scientists develop and test rapid species conservation assessment technique

2012-08-17
(Press-News.org) To speed up the process of identifying threatened and endangered plant species, a team of New York Botanical Garden scientists has developed a streamlined method for evaluating the conservation status of large numbers of plant species, using information from plant research collections and Geographic Information Systems technology.

Faced with such threats as deforestation, climate change, and invasive species, a significant proportion of the world's plant species are commonly believed to be in serious decline and possibly headed toward extinction. For government officials, non-governmental organizations, and anyone working to preserve biodiversity, knowing which species are most at risk is a critical piece of information, but the conservation status of only a fraction of the world's plant species has been determined.

The rapid assessment method developed by Botanical Garden scientists uses the geographic range of a species as an indicator of its vulnerability. Sorting through thousands of species, the process identifies which ones are widespread in a region—and thus not in any immediate risk—and which have restricted ranges, making them more susceptible to extinction when faced with environmental problems.

"The lack of a comprehensive list of threatened and endangered species is one of the greatest impediments to the effort to preserve plant biodiversity," said James S. Miller, Ph.D., the Garden's Dean and Vice President for Science and the lead author of the paper that outlines the method and the results when it was tested on Puerto Rico's native plant species. "Having a more efficient system for assessing threats means that we can quickly focus conservation efforts on priority areas and species that need the most attention."

Using the Garden's streamlined assessment process could make it possible for the conservation community to meet a key target of the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation (GSPC), which calls for an assessment of the conservation status of all known plant species by 2020. (The GSPC is a product of the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity, an international treaty that calls for the conservation and sustainable use of Earth's biodiversity.)

Currently, the standard conservation assessment method is the one created by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) for its Red List, which since 1994 has used a scientifically rigorous, multicriteria process that assigns a species to such categories as "extinct," "least concern," "endangered," and "critically endangered."

Red List assessments have been completed for large groups of animal species—birds, mammals, and amphibians—but so far, fewer than 15,000 plant species have been evaluated under the Red List process, in part because the procedure requires more data than is readily available for many species. According to Dr. Miller, there are approximately 300,000 known plant species, but many more remain to be discovered.

In designing a simpler process for evaluating plant species, Dr. Miller and his colleagues decided to assign species to only two categories: "At Risk" or "Not at Risk." The key criterion for determining a species' status was the size of its geographical range, or extent of occurrence (EOO). Under one of IUCN's criteria, a species with an EOO of more than 20,000 square kilometers (about 7,700 square miles, slightly smaller than the state of New Jersey) is considered not threatened, so that became the cutoff for determining whether a species would be categorized as At Risk or Not At Risk.

The Garden's scientists tested their approach by evaluating the 2,025 species of seed plants native to Puerto Rico, which was chosen because its plants are well documented in research collections. Data for the study came from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, an international, open-access resource, and from the Garden's C.V. Starr Virtual Herbarium, a repository of digitized information about more than 1.6 million plant specimens.

As described in the team's paper in a recent issue of the scientific journal "Biodiversity and Conservation," the assessment consisted of two stages. An initial evaluation of the plant data determined that 1,476 species had ranges of more than 20,000 square kilometers and were classified as Not at Risk. Focusing on the remaining 549 species, the Garden scientists added more precise latitude and longitude references for the locations where many of the species samples had been collected. After recalculating their ranges, the team was able to determine that 90 additional species could be categorized as Not at Risk.

That means, however, that 459 species, or 23 percent of Puerto Rico's flora, should be considered At Risk. The analysis of more than 2,000 species took less than four months.

To test the method's reliability, the Garden scientists compared their results with the Red List, which has assessed only 77 species of Puerto Rican seed plants, assigning 53 to threatened categories. The Garden's rapid assessment process categorized 47 of the 53 species on the Red List as At Risk.

In addition to Dr. Miller, the Garden team consisted of Brian Boom, Ph.D., Director of the Garden's Caribbean Biodiversity Program; Holly A. Porter-Morgan, Ph.D.; Hannah Stevens; James Fleming; and Micah Gensler.

The "Biodiversity and Conservation" paper also describes a second rapid assessment method developed by the Smithsonian Institution, which categorized 367 species as At Risk. It overlapped with the Red List for 42 out of 53 species.

Beyond identifying a broad range of threatened species, the two methods could serve as valuable planning aids, the authors conclude. "The tools used to conduct these analyses can also map distributions of 'At Risk' species and identify specific geographic places where threatened plants are concentrated," they write. "The places thus identified may be considered priority areas for conservation and possible candidate areas for protected status."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study: College students lose respect for peers who hook up too much

2012-08-17
DENVER — Almost half of college students judge men and women with similar sexual histories by the same standard and hold equally negative attitudes towards both their male and female peers who they believe hook up "too much," suggests new research to be presented at the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. "Men and women are increasingly judging each other on the same level playing field," said Rachel Allison, co-author of the study and a doctoral candidate in the University of Illinois at Chicago's Department of Sociology. "But, gender equality ...

Study: Homeless people find equality, acceptance on social networking sites

2012-08-17
DENVER — Many have argued the Marxist theories of a classless society died with the collapse of the Soviet Union and a faltering Cuba, but a University of Dayton study has found a place where such approaches may have a shot of survival—Facebook, and other social networking sites. University of Dayton sociologist and criminologist Art Jipson discovered in his most recent research that the homeless, along with everyone else, are turning to social media and that social media sites are turning into places where all people are truly equal. Jipson, an associate sociology ...

Study explores the impact of corruption and military organization on civilians

2012-08-17
DENVER — New research out of the University of Cincinnati is believed to be the first to examine the relative impact of militarization and corruption on civilian populations. The findings reveal that a specific form of military organization—praetorian militarization—as well as national-level corruption—both adversely affect the well-being of citizens. The findings by Steve Carlton-Ford, a professor and head of the UC sociology department, and T. David Evans, a UC emeritus associate professor of sociology, will be presented at the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological ...

Longer time to find new job, less pay for moms laid off during recession

2012-08-17
In a 2010 survey of laid-off workers across the United States, married moms spent more time between jobs and were overall less likely to find new jobs compared with married dads. Once re-employed, married moms experienced a decrease in earnings of $175 more per week compared with married dads. The results suggest that the recent recession, dubbed the "man-cession" or "he-cession" because more men than women lost jobs, could also be viewed as a "mom-cession" as laid-off moms had the hardest time finding new jobs. "These findings hold true across different backgrounds, ...

Smoking during pregnancy increases the risk of wheeze and asthma in preschool children

2012-08-17
Maternal smoking during pregnancy is associated with wheeze and asthma inpreschool children, even among children who were not exposed to maternal smoking late inpregnancy or after birth, according to a new study. "Epidemiological evidence suggests that exposure to maternal smoking during fetal andearly life increases the risk of childhood wheezing and asthma, but earlier studieswere not able to differentiate the effects of prenatal and postnatal exposure," said lead author Åsa Neuman. MD, of the Institute of Environmental Medicine at the KarolinskaInstitutet in Stockholm, ...

Foreclosure crisis and metropolitan crime rates

Foreclosure crisis and metropolitan crime rates
2012-08-17
The housing foreclosure crisis has been blamed for widespread economic and social problems in the United States, including reduced property values, depressed consumer spending and a decline in government services. Some observers speculate that it has also led to more crime in hard-hit cities. Not so, according to research by doctoral student Roderick Jones and professor William Alex Pridemore of the Department of Criminal Justice at Indiana University Bloomington. In an examination of 142 U.S. metropolitan areas, they found no association between housing-mortgage stress ...

Integrative Psychiatrists Brown & Gerbarg Teach Innovative Trauma Transformation Workshop at Kripalu Yoga and Healing Center

2012-08-17
Richard P. Brown, MD, Patricia Gerbarg, MD, and Heather Mason of Yoga for the Mind, teach ground-breaking Breath~Body~Mind Level 1 Training for Stress and Trauma Transformation Sunday through Friday, August 19-24, 2012, at the Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health in Stockbridge, MA. The six-day workshop, eligible for CE credits and a certificate, will train yoga teachers, yoga therapists, and health care providers mind-body healing techniques to help clients recover from stress and trauma. Practitioners will also learn techniques for their own personal use. Based on extensive ...

The New York & New Jersey Minority Supplier Development Council Holds 17th Annual Networking on the Green for Scholarships on August 20 in Monroe Twp, NJ

2012-08-17
The New York & New Jersey Minority Supplier Development Council (The Council) will hold its 17th Annual Networking on the Green for Scholarships on August 20 at the elegant Forsgate Country Club, located in central New Jersey's scenic Monroe Township community. Networking on the Green is a day of business networking and activities ranging from a golf competition to dance lessons. There's a non-golfers golf clinic, tennis clinic, in-house game competitions, an awards luncheon and grand prize auctions. One unique auction prize is a golf package for three (3) for a ...

DJ Smallz Announces Southern Smoke Summer World Tour

2012-08-17
DJ Smallz and Southern Smoke brands are proud to announce the Southern Smoke Summer World Tour taking place from August 8, 2012 - September 30, 2012 in multiple cities throughout Japan, the Middle East and Canada. DJ Smallz, aka "Mr. Southern Smoke" is headlining the tour along with surprise guest appearances from some of his celebrity friends and athletes. DJ Smallz gained a notable position in the music game in 2003 with the launch of his "Southern Smoke" mixtape brand, a new level of mixtapes that was specifically known for breaking new music ...

200 Orphanages Worldwide Seeks Greater Impact for Orphans, Welcomes Cory B. Scheer, Monique Aiken to Executive Board, and Rev. Jacob Yohannan, Mercy Homes, India as Partner Member

2012-08-17
200 Orphanages Worldwide, Inc., a nationwide orphan care nonprofit based in Sartell Minnesota, is expanding with board members equipped to develop a deeper and wider reach on behalf of orphans. The latest Members bring unique gifts and talents to the board in nonprofit expertise and campaign outreach as it seeks to make a greater impact in the lives of orphans. Cory B. Scheer, assistant professor of Nonprofit and Business Leadership at William Jewell College in Liberty Missouri joined the board in June 2012. He earned his masters at Rockhurst University and was executive ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Sugar-coated nanoparticles could target deadly breast cancer

Understanding catalyst activity for green hydrogen production

Zhu harnessing interpretable neuro-symbolic learning for reliable ranking

George Mason researchers receive funding for Quantum System Stability & Reproducibility Workshop (StableQ)

Li studying quantum algorithms

Chronic benzodiazepine consumption impacts sleep quality in older adults, new research shows

USF-led Nature study: Gene defect slows brain’s cleanup, driving Alzheimer’s risk

Close link between street sweeps, overdose and systemic harm: SFU study

New study seeks to understand the links between social drivers of health by investigating cardiovascular health in young adults

New catalysis method can generate a library of novel molecules for drug discovery

Delta-8 THC use highest where marijuana is illegal, study finds

Study shows blood conservation technique reduces odds of transfusion by 27% during heart surgery

Mapping an entire subcontinent for sustainable development

Complete brain activity map revealed for the first time

Children with sickle cell disease face higher risk of dental issues, yet many don’t receive needed care

First brain-wide map of decision-making charted in mice

Mechanical forces drive evolutionary change

Safe, practical underground carbon storage could reduce warming by only 0.7°C – almost 10 times less than previously thought

Chinese scientists reveal hidden extinction crisis in native flora

Patient reports aren’t anecdotal—they’re valuable data

Mount Sinai study discovers potential link between stress and type 2 diabetes

Hurricane Sandy linked to lasting heart disease risk in elderly

Precision genetic target provides hope for Barth syndrome treatment

Colorless solar windows: Transforming architecture into clean power plants

SwRI-proposed mission could encounter and explore a future interstellar comet like 3I/ATLAS up close

Obtaining prefrontal cortex biopsies during deep brain stimulation adds no risk to procedure

New research finds 62% of AFib patients were unaware of the condition before diagnosis

69 schools awarded wellness grants to support healthier communities nationwide

Transparent Reporting of Observational Studies Emulating a Target Trial—The TARGET statement

Nonregistration, discontinuation, and nonpublication of randomized trials

[Press-News.org] Triage for plants: NYBG scientists develop and test rapid species conservation assessment technique