Abstract

Red Lists are thought to attract attention to the conservation of threatened species. Determining the impact of these lists on the attention of scientists is a matter of consequence for biodiversity conservation. We evaluated trends in mentions of Brazilian angiosperm plants in the biodiversity conservation literature and tested the effect of the Red List of Brazilian Flora (RLBF) publication on these mentions. We collected mentions in the literature available in Google Scholar from the years 1990-2020, for 2449 Brazilian angiosperm species assessed in different IUCN categories. We used a Bayesian structural time-series method to test the effect of the RLBF publication on the number of mentions for the set of species in the IUCN categories, angiosperm families, and plants of commercial interest. The results showed a gap in mentions for many threatened and Data Deficient species in the scientific literature. We also found that the mentions were biased toward species of commercial interest and were unrelated to their threat status. Publication of the RLBF positively affected the number of mentions for IUCN threat categories and for more than half of the angiosperm families. These results were obtained after a few species of commercial interest were excluded from each treated group. This study suggests that the Red List assessments are essential to determine priorities for resource allocation to scientific activities. However, this effect was not sufficient to reduce the bias in scientific attention. Our findings support the need to stimulate more effective programs to fund research on threatened plant species.

Highlights

  • Research conducted by the scientific community is essential to increase our knowledge of threatened species

  • The Bayesian structural time-series (BSTS) indicated no effects on mentions after Red List of Brazilian Flora (RLBF) publication for IUCN threatened categories (CR, EN, and VU), Data Deficient (DD), and Near Threatened (NT) species during 2014−2020 (Table 1)

  • The positive impact for the VU species was most prominent as the mentions increased by 0.87; in relative terms, this represents an increase of 57%

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Summary

Introduction

Research conducted by the scientific community is essential to increase our knowledge of threatened species. The Red List of Threatened Species (RLTS) assembled by the IUCN is a robust system for compilation, synthesis, and dissemination of species data (https:// www.iucnredlist.org/en). Among the numerous contributions to conservation strategies is the capacity of the RLTS to influence the allocation of resources to species in the most critical categories (Rodrigues et al 2006), including research efforts aimed at increasing knowledge of the species of concern. Recent studies have tested this possible contribution; for example, the IUCN global Red List assessment was pivotal in attracting research efforts to several groups of animals, this effect was most pronounced for species classified as Data Deficient (Jarić et al 2017). The creation of the list of the ‘World’s 25 Most Endangered Primates’ increased the research efforts mentioning the listed primates (Acerbi et al 2020)

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