The importance of taxonomy for determining species distribution: A case study using the disjunct lichen <i>Brodoa oroarctica</i>.

Species-focused conservation requires a thorough understanding of species’ distributions. Delineating a species’ distribution requires taxonomic knowledge and adequate occurrence data. For plants and fungi, herbaria represent a valuable source of large-scale occurrence data. Advances in digital tech...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Botany
Main Authors: Paquette, Hayley Anne, McMullin, Richard Troy, Wiersma, Yolanda
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/cjb-2023-0096
https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/cjb-2023-0096
Description
Summary:Species-focused conservation requires a thorough understanding of species’ distributions. Delineating a species’ distribution requires taxonomic knowledge and adequate occurrence data. For plants and fungi, herbaria represent a valuable source of large-scale occurrence data. Advances in digital technology mean that data from many herbarium collections worldwide are now easily accessible. However, species concepts can change over time requiring herbarium records to be re-examined and databases updated, which does not always occur synchronously across all collections. Therefore, non-critical use of these data can promote inaccuracies in understanding species distributions. Taxonomic revisions are common in understudied organisms, such as lichens. Here, we illustrate how changing taxonomy and non-critical acceptance of online data affects our understanding of disjunct distributions, using the lichen <i>Brodoa oroarctica</i> (Krog) Goward as an example. Defining the distribution of the arctic lichen <i>B. oroarctica</i> is confounded by changing taxonomy and uncertainty of herbarium records that pre-date taxonomic revisions. We review the distribution of this species in the literature and in aggregate occurrence databases, and verify herbarium specimens that represent disjunct occurrences in eastern North America to present an updated account of its distribution and frequency in eastern North America. We show that knowledge of changing species taxonomy is essential to depicting accurate species distributions.