地缘政治对陆生软体动物新物种描述的影响。

IF 3.5
Proceedings. Biological sciences Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2025-09-17 DOI:10.1098/rspb.2025.1428
Evandro C T Abreu, Edson Lourenço da Silva, Mario R Moura
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管有230万种已被描述的物种,但生物多样性知识仍然不完整,分布不均匀。我们分析了20年来陆地软体动物的描述,将合作分类为国内(仅由当地研究人员撰写),降落伞(仅由外国研究人员撰写)或混合(联合合作),以评估发现实践,社会经济因素,方法严严性(类型标本数量,形态特征,证据线和出版长度)以及分析工具和资源的可获得性(内部解剖,分子生物学和分类学修订)。全球南方拥有88.6%的降落伞发现,当地研究人员参与了33.3%的总描述。排他性做法导致全球南方研究人员的第一作者率较低,实地工作人员经常被遗漏。合作是不对称的:近90%的全球南方主导的研究包括北方的研究人员,但只有8%的北方主导的研究包括南方的合作伙伴。经济实力与降落伞发现的绝对和相对产出相关,而混合合作改善了全球南方获得分析工具的机会——尽管它们的描述仍然不够全面。在南半球的降落伞发现显示出较低的方法严谨性,强调了排除当地专业知识的成本。由全球北方主导的89%的分类修订进一步反映了资源差异。优先考虑地方能力建设的公平国际合作对于实现全球生物多样性知识和推进保护目标至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Geopolitical impacts on the description of new terrestrial mollusc species.

Despite 2.3 million described species, biodiversity knowledge remains incomplete and unevenly distributed. We analysed 20 years of terrestrial mollusc descriptions, categorizing collaborations as domestic (authored by resident researchers only), parachute (foreign researchers only) or mixed (joint collaboration) to assess links between discovery practices, socioeconomic factors, methodological rigour (number of type specimens, morphometric characters, evidence lines and publication length) and accessibility to analytical tools and resources (internal anatomy, molecular biology and taxonomic revisions). Global South harboured 88.6% of parachute discoveries, with resident researchers involved in 33.3% of total descriptions. Exclusionary practices resulted in lower first-authorship rates for Global South researchers and frequent omission of fieldwork personnel. Collaborations were asymmetrical: nearly 90% of Global South-led studies included Northern researchers, but only 8% of Northern-led studies included Southern partners. Economic power correlated with absolute and relative parachute discovery outputs, while mixed collaborations improved Global South access to analytical tools-although their descriptions remained less comprehensive. Parachute discoveries in the Global South showed lower methodological rigour, underscoring the cost of excluding local expertise. Taxonomic revisions, which were 89% led by the Global North, further reflected resource disparities. Equitable international collaborations prioritizing local capacity-building are crucial for achieving global biodiversity knowledge and advancing conservation goals.

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