Third of tropical African plants face extinction

The mountain forests in Kenya and Tanzania contain many threatened and rare plant species
Image captionThe mountain forests in Kenya and Tanzania contain many threatened and rare plant species

A third of tropical African plants are on the path to extinction, according to a new assessment.

Much of western Africa, Ethiopia, and parts of Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of the Congo are the hardest hit regions, standing to lose more than 40% of their richness of plants.

Species at risk include trees, shrubs, herbs and woody vines.

Threats include deforestation, population growth and climate change, the scientists said.

“Biodiversity provides countless benefits to humans and losing diversity jeopardises our future,” said lead researcher Dr Thomas Couvreur of the French National Institute for Sustainable Development.

Loss of biodiversity will be particularly problematic in tropical Africa, “a region of incredible diversity but with major social and political challenges and expected rapid population growth over the next decades”, he added.

Example of a critically endangered tree species from Tanzania
Image captionAn example of a critically endangered tree species from Tanzania

The findings of the study, published in Science Advances, are based on a revised method for assessing extinction risk.

Official assessments of extinction are recorded in The Red List of Threatened Species, published by the International Union for Conservation of Nature – IUCN.

Vincent Droissart
Image captionExample of an endangered orchid species from Cameroon and Gabon

So far, almost nine in 10 mammals and two-thirds of birds have been assessed, but less than 8% of vascular plants (flowering plants and most other plants, excluding mosses and algae).

The researchers used a similar, but more speedy, method to assess the likely extinction risk of more than 20,000 plant species.

They found that 33% of the species are potentially threatened with extinction, and another third of species are likely rare, potentially becoming threatened in the near future.

This is mainly due to human activities such as deforestation, land-use changes, population growth, economic development, and climate change, they said.

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