Arising From F. Mazel et al. Nature Communications https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05126-3 (2018)
The biodiversity measure, phylogenetic diversity (PD), links evolutionary history to the conservation of feature-diversity (broadly, the different evolutionary features of species), and so to future options for humanity (option value)1. Mazel et al.2 claim that (1) PD must perform better than random in capturing functional diversity (FD) if it is to have any validity for conservation; (2) PD captures FD unreliably; and (3) we may need to abandon the use of PD in conservation, depending on the outcome of further FD randomisation tests. We argue that Mazel et al.2 misrepresent the PD/feature-diversity framework as restricted to functional traits, and we illustrate how a conservation focus on functional traits could lead to the global loss of PD, feature-diversity and option values. The core rationale for PD conservation initiatives, such as the EDGE of Existence programme, should continue to build on the link from PD to broad feature-diversity1,3,4, not a link to a few nominated functional traits.
Mazel et al.2 explicitly point to Faith’s1 original broad feature-diversity arguments in describing the idea that conserving PD will conserve a wide variety of forms and functions. However, Mazel et al.2 then adopt a narrower functional perspective, asserting that such diversity can be measured as FD, calculated using selected traits of assumed ecological relevance (e.g., four mammalian traits: diet, body mass, activity cycle, foraging height). Mazel et al.2 incorrectly synonymise FD with feature-diversity by misrepresenting Faith’s reference to feature-diversity1 as a reference to FD, and Faith’s reference to future options arising from feature-diversity1 as a reference to future options from FD.
This misrepresentation underpins their false claim: “the fundamental phylogenetic gambit at the heart of all PD-based conservation strategies …[is that]… maximizing PD captures more FD than randomly choosing species.” Because they incorrectly equate PD’s broad feature-diversity with their narrowly defined FD, Mazel et al.2 have no justification for this claim that failure to recover FD in their randomisation tests casts doubt on all PD conservation initiatives.
One such PD conservation initiative, the EDGE of Existence programme5, is characterised by Mazel et al.2 as following the logic of their FD phylogenetic gambit. In reality, an original rationale for EDGE explicitly drew on Faith’s1 feature-diversity arguments: Isaac et al.5 noted that “phylogenetic diversity is clearly related to character diversity”, arguing that PD-based scores indicate unique features and potential future utilitarian value. This general feature-diversity/future options link has supported the prioritisation of EDGE species for conservation, including those that might otherwise be neglected. The EDGE rationale echoes the history of studies on how phylogeny is informative about both known and unknown features of organisms3,6. Early studies examining character/feature data and phylogenies3,4 also provided tests corroborating the specific rationale for PD—that shared ancestry can generally account for shared features among species. Mazel et al.’s2 test of their FD gambit does not assess whether PD captures a wide range of features; indeed, a perfect PD-feature relationship can produce a failure in their test7.
The well-corroborated PD-features relationship3,4 has supported the use of EDGE information by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), as one indicator for “maintenance of options” (one of “nature’s contributions to people”)8. IPBES reports global estimates of total imperilled PD, over six major taxonomic groups8. The IPBES Asia-Pacific assessment8 provides recent examples of surprising global benefits that have been discovered, illustrating the broad range of these often-unfamiliar evolutionary features. These include the discovery that funnel-web spider venom (Hadronyche infensa) is the unlikely source for medication to avoid brain damage caused by strokes9, and that a substance in Tasmanian Devil milk (Sarcophilus harrisii) fights antibiotic-resistant bacteria10. This unusual mammal feature illustrates the scope of feature-diversity, in contrast to Mazel et al.’s2 limited four ecological traits. Other examples highlight how the feature of interest originated in an ancestral lineage (e.g. medicinal features in plants11), further corroborating the PD rationale.
The EDGE of Existence programme interprets PD and feature-diversity as indicating multiple values of biodiversity. A species’ unique contribution to PD (Evolutionary Distinctiveness5) not only indicates its contribution to option value, but is a proxy for its many unique evolutionary novelties – a heritage that we marvel at (and link to bequest and existence values). EDGE also has acknowledged the scope for such PD conservation to preserve functional traits12. Such inclusivity is sensible, and we welcome further exploration of the PD and feature-diversity link, including FD. The weakness of Mazel et al.’s2 study is the unwarranted restriction that the only rationale for PD conservation is their FD gambit.
Reflecting their exclusive FD focus on ecosystem functions and services, Mazel et al.2 argue that conservation increasingly focuses on local scales, suggesting that if their gambit were valid, PD could prioritise species in “conservation programs such as the EDGE of Existence who might be planning their list of species to protect on a coral reef”13. However, the EDGE of Existence programme actually considers global-scale PD conservation and associated future options, and does not set priorities locally (such as within individual coral reefs). In a simple example (Fig. 1) we show that in such a local-PD prioritisation, some EDGE species may never become a priority, resulting in their global loss.
We then explored the potential magnitude of this disconnect between local and global PD perspectives using information on Acropora corals14. Under Mazel et al.’s2 FD focus promoting more localised PD priority-setting, we show there is a real danger that some threatened coral species are consequently never selected in individual ecosystems, allowing global PD/EDGE losses (Fig. 2).
We conclude that Mazel et al.’s2 study misrepresents the feature-diversity rationale for PD conservation, and unjustifiably raises doubts about PD applicability in conservation programmes, potentially undermining the growing adoption of PD approaches. Reflecting their exclusive focus on functional traits, their introductory reference to the biodiversity crisis highlights loss of ecosystem functions but neglects loss of global option values. Yet option values were the earliest core values of biotic diversity seen as threatened by the extinction crisis3. The Mazel et al.2 study is another example of an all-too-common problem in biodiversity science, where an unwarranted exclusive focus on ecosystem functions/services typically implies a critical neglect of global biodiversity values15.
Methods
To illustrate how localised PD priority-setting allows global PD losses, we created a hypothetical phylogeny for eight species, each designated as threatened or secure (extinction probabilities of 1 and 0, respectively), and occurring in one or both of two local ecosystems. PD-based priority-setting within each ecosystem assumed a limited conservation budget allowing selection of the two threatened species that maximise gain in secured PD. Subsequently, global PD loss was indicated by the unsecured branches arising when species were not selected in either ecosystem.
We explored this problem using existing information on Acropora corals phylogeny, distribution, and conservation status14. The 141 reef ecoregions formed our local reef ecosystems. Securing threatened species provided PD gains, approximated by phylogenetic terminal branch lengths. Local PD priority-setting selected threatened species in order of the magnitude of these gains, up to a nominated budget number of species, applied within each ecosystem. We tabulated: (1) for each nominated budget, species that were not selected in any ecosystem; (2) the minimum budget (applied within all ecosystems) required for each species to be selected in at least one ecosystem, avoiding global loss.
Data availability
The Acropora corals data are available at Dryad Digital Repository with the identifier https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.178n314, and other relevant data are available from the authors.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Mike Hoffmann and Oliver Wearn for useful comments and discussion. The progress of the debate on the conservation of phylogenetic diversity has been spurred by a working group discussion in 2017 on the evolution of the EDGE metric, which included the co-authors on this correspondence and several of the co-authors on Mazel et al.’s original article, and we are grateful for their perspectives which continue to shape applied conservation in this field. A special thank you to the EDGE team and EDGE Fellows working around the world, who meaningfully put academic debate into practice through their conservation of EDGE species.
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N.R.O., D.F., R.G., and C.G. conceived the design of the response, D.F. conducted the analysis, N.R.O. and D.F., wrote the first draft and N.R.O., D.F., R.G., and C.G. edited the final version.
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C.L.G. is and N.R.O. was employed by the Zoological Society of London, in the EDGE of Existence programme, which is also the NERC (Natural Environment Research Council) CASE (formerly known as Collaborative Awards in Science and Engineering) studentship partner for Rikki Gumbs. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.
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Owen, N.R., Gumbs, R., Gray, C.L. et al. Global conservation of phylogenetic diversity captures more than just functional diversity. Nat Commun 10, 859 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08600-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08600-8
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