Three reasons to re-evaluate fungal diversity ‘on Earth and in the ocean’

Publication date: December 2011 Source:Fungal Biology Reviews, Volume 25, Issue 4 Author(s): David Bass , Thomas A. Richards Attempts to assess fungal global species richness are confounded by several problems: uncertainty about the number of described species, incomplete fungal inventories even at a high taxonomic level, high diversity of unknown, often small and elusive taxa, high levels of morphological conservation, and incomplete knowledge of their ecological and biogeographical distributions. The two main bases for estimating total fungal diversity are (1) the number of described species and their taxonomic structure, and (2) extrapolating species-area relationships. We argue that knowledge of fungal taxonomy and environmental sampling of fungi are both too incomplete for either approach to be reliable. However, it is likely that the true number of fungal species on the planet is a seven-digit number, and may even be an order of magnitude higher. Highlights ► Fungal diversity is extremely complex; there have been several attempts to quantify it. ► These attempts have often involved scaling approaches applied to taxonomic structures. ► Incomplete taxonomic and molecular sampling preclude an accurate estimate of global diversity.
Source: Fungal Biology Reviews - Category: Biology Source Type: research