Map of Life
Read and download the recently released Species Protection Report here.

Host pathogen data

Supplementary data for Simkin et al. (2023), "Zoonotic Host Richness in the Global Wildland–Urban Interface", Global Change Biology, In Press, DOI: 10.1111/gcb.70039. Code and additional data available via GitHub.

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Rebecca Senior SPS

Country SPS values from upcoming paper by Senior et al.

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Global elevational diversity and diversification of birds

Quintero & Jetz 2018
Nature

While different geomorphological and climatic attributes of mountain regions have been pivotal in determining the remarkable richness gradients observed today, our results underscore the role of ongoing and often very recent diversification processes in maintaining the unique and highly adapted biodiversity of higher elevations. Data on breeding distributions were compiled from the best available sources for a given broad geographical region or taxonomic group totalling 9,993 species ranges were previously validated to have minimum (<5-10%) false presences at spatial grains larger than approximately 100 km2. A database of bird elevational ranges was compiled based on a total of 318 published sources and consisting of 27,840 species/mountain-range-specific entries. When information was available, separate elevational ranges were used for each mountain system, incorporating different elevational ranges for widely distributed species. When different elevational ranges of a species were available for the same mountain range, the minimum and maximum amongst all given ranges were used.

Download Elevational Ranges (XLSX)Download Sampled Assemblages (RDA)

Elton Traits

EltonTraits 1.0: Species-level foraging attributes of the world’s birds and mammals
Ecological Archives E095-178

Species are characterized by physiological, behavioral, and ecological attributes that are all subject to varying evolutionary and ecological constraints and jointly determine their role and function in ecosystems. Attributes such as diet, foraging strata, foraging time, and body size, in particular, determine a large portion of the "Eltonian" niches of species. Here we present a global species-level compilation of these key attributes for all 9993 and 5400 extant bird and mammal species derived from key literature sources. Global handbooks and monographs allowed the consistent sourcing of attributes for most species. For diet and foraging stratum we followed a defined protocol to translate the verbal descriptions into standardized, semiquantitative information about relative importance of different categories. Together with body size (continuous) and activity time (categorical) this enables a much finer distinction of species' foraging ecology than typical categorical guild assignments allow. Attributes lacking information for specific species were flagged, and interpolated values based on taxonomy were provided instead. The presented data set is limited by, among others, these select cases missing observed data, by errors and uncertainty in the expert assessment as presented in the literature, and by the lack of intraspecific information. However, the standardized and transparent nature and complete global coverage of the data set should support an array of potential studies in biogeography, community ecology, macroevolution, global change biology, and conservation. Potential uses include comparative work involving these traits as focal or secondary variables, ecological research on the trait or trophic structure of communities, or conservation science concerned with the loss of function among species or in ecosystems in a changing world. We hope that this publication will spur the sharing, collaborative curation, and extension of data to the benefit of a more integrative, rigorous, and global biodiversity science.

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Species evolutionary distinctness - Birds

Distribution and conservation of global evolutionary distinctness in birds

The study quantifies evolutionary distinctness (ED), i.e. a species' contribution to the total evolutionary history of its group, for all of the world's 9,993 bird species and assesses which species are both distinct and rare (high EDR) or distinct and threatened (high EDGE). Species representing the most evolutionary history over the smallest area as well as some of the most imperiled distinct species are often concentrated outside the species-rich regions and countries, suggesting they may not be well captured by current conservation planning. The study demonstrates that with most species likely remaining ecologically understudied, combining growing phylogenetic and spatial data may be an efficient way to retain vital aspects of biodiversity.

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