Back to Search Start Over

Selecting the best candidates for resurrecting extinct-in-the-wild plants from herbaria

Authors :
Giulia Albani Rocchetti
Angelino Carta
Andrea Mondoni
Sandrine Godefroid
Charles C. Davis
Giulia Caneva
Matthew A. Albrecht
Karla Alvarado
Roxali Bijmoer
Renata Borosova
Christian Bräuchler
Elinor Breman
Marie Briggs
Stephane Buord
Lynette H. Cave
Nílber Gonçalves Da Silva
Alexandra H. Davey
Rachael M. Davies
John B. Dickie
Melodina Fabillo
Andreas Fleischmann
Andrew Franks
Geoffrey Hall
Gintaras Kantvilas
Cornelia Klak
Udayangani Liu
Leopoldo Medina
Lars Gunnar Reinhammar
Ramagwai J. Sebola
Ines Schönberger
Patrick Sweeney
Hermann Voglmayr
Adam White
Jan J. Wieringa
Elke Zippel
Thomas Abeli
Albani Rocchetti, Giulia
Carta, Angelino
Mondoni, Andrea
Godefroid, Sandrine
Davis, Charles C
Caneva, Giulia
Albrecht, Matthew A
Alvarado, Karla
Bijmoer, Roxali
Borosova, Renata
Bräuchler, Christian
Breman, Elinor
Briggs, Marie
Buord, Stephane
Cave, Lynette H
Da Silva, Nílber Gonçalve
Davey, Alexandra H
Davies, Rachael M
Dickie, John B
Fabillo, Melodina
Fleischmann, Andrea
Franks, Andrew
Hall, Geoffrey
Kantvilas, Gintara
Klak, Cornelia
Liu, Udayangani
Medina, Leopoldo
Reinhammar, Lars Gunnar
Sebola, Ramagwai J
Schönberger, Ine
Sweeney, Patrick
Voglmayr, Hermann
White, Adam
Wieringa, Jan J
Zippel, Elke
Abeli, Thomas
Source :
Nature plants.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Resurrecting extinct species is a fascinating and challenging idea for scientists and the general public. Whereas some theoretical progress has been made for animals, the resurrection of extinct plants (de-extinction sensu lato) is a relatively recently discussed topic. In this context, the term 'de-extinction' is used sensu lato to refer to the resurrection of 'extinct in the wild' species from seeds or tissues preserved in herbaria, as we acknowledge the current impossibility of knowing a priori whether a herbarium seed is alive and can germinate. In plants, this could be achieved by germinating or in vitro tissue-culturing old diaspores such as seeds or spores available in herbarium specimens. This paper reports the first list of plant de-extinction candidates based on the actual availability of seeds in herbarium specimens of globally extinct plants. We reviewed globally extinct seed plants using online resources and additional literature on national red lists, resulting in a list of 361 extinct taxa. We then proposed a method of prioritizing candidates for seed-plant de-extinction from diaspores found in herbarium specimens and complemented this with a phylogenetic approach to identify species that may maximize evolutionarily distinct features. Finally, combining data on seed storage behaviour and longevity, as well as specimen age in the novel 'best de-extinction candidate' score (DEXSCO), we identified 556 herbarium specimens belonging to 161 extinct species with available seeds. We expect that this list of de-extinction candidates and the novel approach to rank them will boost research efforts towards the first-ever plant de-extinction.

Subjects

Subjects :
Plant Science

Details

ISSN :
20550278
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature plants
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f6baa54203899ccb4d58d910232d7be