Abstract

Central Pamir-Alai, which is located almost entirely within the area of Tajikistan, is one of the world hotspots of biodiversity, harbouring ca. 4,300 species and 1,400 endemic plants. The first application of the IUCN Red List criteria reveals that among all native species occurring in Tajikistan 1,627 taxa (38.11%) are threatened, including 23 extinct (0.54%), 271 (6.34%) critically endangered (CR), 717 (16.79%) endangered (EN) and 639 (14.96%) vulnerable (VU). Globally, 20 taxa are extinct, 711 (16.65%) threatened, including 144 (3.37%) critically endangered, 322 (7.54%) endangered and 245 (5.73%) vulnerable. As we found positive correlation between human density and the number of threatened species, we suspect this indirect factor responsible for the species diversity decline. Extinct or threatened taxa have short blooming periods in spring or early summer, have limited geographical range and inhabit mainly valley bottoms at lower altitudes. Threatened taxa occupy extremely dry or wet habitats, such as deserts, semi-deserts, water reservoirs and fens. The group of threatened plants consists mostly of Central Asian, Indo-Indochinese and Arctic species. Ornamental plants have a higher extinction risk than other plants, but species collected for medicinal reasons and used for forage or food reveal lower retreatment rate. Our assessment fills a gap for important plant area and provides the data for raising the effectiveness of plant diversity conservation.

Highlights

  • Species diversity loss still remains one of the main imperatives of our time and one of the main topics of scientific studies

  • As only twelve species from Tajikistan are included in the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) global red listing (6 critically endangered (CR), 3 EN and 3 VU, 2 near threatened (NT), 18 DD47), these numbers indicate the degree of under investigation of the conservation status in this valuable area of the world

  • This difference is striking if we compare this region to other countries located in other biodiversity hotspots

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Summary

Introduction

Species diversity loss still remains one of the main imperatives of our time and one of the main topics of scientific studies. The continuing decline of plant diversity demands continuous research on evaluation of the conservation status of flora with the use of comprehensive International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) criteria (www.iucnredlist.org) These criteria are widely recognised as the most comprehensive tool for assessing the global conservation status of species and categorising plants according to their estimated risk of extinction (e.g. Orsenigo et al.[4], Maes et al.[5]). The red books of the country, consecutively issued in 1988 and 2015, include first 209 and 239 threatened vascular plants[31,32] These numbers are surprisingly low, given that the threats from urbanisation, agriculture and climate change in Tajikistan are extremely high

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