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| U.S. biodiversity in jeopardy, study shows
The United States has twice the biodiversity than previously estimated, researchers say. But the profusion of flora and fauna may be a kind of double jeopardy, according to a Nature Conservancy study released Wednesday. The study is the most complete inventory of America's plants and animals to date. More than 200,000 native plants and animals double the previous estimate were documented. The study also reveals the United States is one of the most ecologically diverse countries in the world. It is home to 10 percent of all species found on Earth. Every year, some 30 previously unknown species of flowering plants are found in the country, according to the study. That's the good news. The bad news is included in other key findings in the study:
Despite these trends, there is time to protect the country's natural heritage, the study notes. Scientists are buoyed by the fact that the United States has a greater diversity of major ecosystems, from prairies to tundras to forests to deserts, than any other country in the world. "The good news is Americans enjoy an incredibly rich natural heritage, from rare fish surviving in desert oases, to the world's tallest trees California's coastal redwoods to Hawaii's honeycreepers, colorful birds whose evolutionary story rivals that of the famous Darwin's finches," noted Bruce Stein, lead author of the report. "The bad news is that Americans risk losing much of the wealth if current trends continue." The study indicates biodiversity "hot spots" areas where unique species are in danger. They include the San Francisco Bay area, Southern California (including Death Valley), the southern Appalachian Mountains and the Florida Panhandle.
The report is the result of 25 years of research by the conservancy's Natural Heritage network, a program in all 50 United States. The Natural Heritage program maintains a database that contains scientific information about species across the country. Copyright 2000, Environmental News Network, All Rights Reserved RELATED STORIES: No roads where the deer roam, federal judge rules RELATED ENN STORIES: Biodiversity is the hot spot to be for conservationists RELATED SITES: The Nature Conservancy newsroom | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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