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Amazon plant diversity revealed by a taxonomically verified species list.

Domingos CardosoTiina SärkinenSara AlexanderAndré M AmorimVolker BittrichMarcela CelisDouglas C DalyPedro FiaschiVicki A FunkLeandro L GiacominRenato GoldenbergGustavo HeidenJoão IganciCarol L KelloffSandra KnappHaroldo Cavalcante de LimaAnderson F P MachadoRubens Manoel Dos SantosRenato Mello-SilvaFabián A MichelangeliJohn MitchellPeter MoonlightPedro Luís Rodrigues de MoraesScott A MoriTeonildes Sacramento NunesTerry D PenningtonJosé Rubens PiraniGhillean T PranceLuciano Paganucci de QueirozAlessandro RapiniRicarda RiinaCarlos Alberto Vargas RinconNádia RoqueGustavo ShimizuMarcos SobralJoão Renato StehmannWarren D StevensCharlotte M TaylorMarcelo TrovóCássio van den BergHenk van der WerffPedro Lage VianaCharles E ZartmanRafaela Campostrini Forzza
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2017)
Recent debates on the number of plant species in the vast lowland rain forests of the Amazon have been based largely on model estimates, neglecting published checklists based on verified voucher data. Here we collate taxonomically verified checklists to present a list of seed plant species from lowland Amazon rain forests. Our list comprises 14,003 species, of which 6,727 are trees. These figures are similar to estimates derived from nonparametric ecological models, but they contrast strongly with predictions of much higher tree diversity derived from parametric models. Based on the known proportion of tree species in neotropical lowland rain forest communities as measured in complete plot censuses, and on overall estimates of seed plant diversity in Brazil and in the neotropics in general, it is more likely that tree diversity in the Amazon is closer to the lower estimates derived from nonparametric models. Much remains unknown about Amazonian plant diversity, but this taxonomically verified dataset provides a valid starting point for macroecological and evolutionary studies aimed at understanding the origin, evolution, and ecology of the exceptional biodiversity of Amazonian forests.
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