Global impoverishment of natural vegetation revealed by dark diversity

Author

Komatsu, Kimberly J.

Konečná, Marie

Kook, Ene

Korell, Lotte

Koroleva, Natalia

Korznikov, Kiril A.

Kozhevnikova, Maria V.

Kozub, Lukasz

Laanisto, Lauri

Lager, Helena

Harrison, Susan

Lewis, Robert John

Moles, Angela T.

Öpik, Maarja

Price, Jodi N.

Amputu, Vistorina

Askarizadeh, Diana

Atashgahi, Zohreh

Aubin, Isabelle

Azcárate, Francisco M.

Lanta, Vojtech

Pärtel, Meelis

Lasagno, Romina G.

Tamme, Riin

Lembrechts, Jonas J.

Carmona, Carlos P.

Li, Liping

Riibak, Kersti

Lisner, Ales

Moora, Mari

Liu, Houija

Bennett, Jonathan A.

Liu, Kun

Chiarucci, Alessandro

Liu, Xuhe

Chytrý, Milan

Lucas-Borja, Manuel Esteban

de Bello, Francesco

Ludewig, Kristin

Eriksson, Ove

Barrett, Matthew D.

Bashirzadeh, Maral

Bátori, Zoltán

Beenaerts, Natalie

Bergholz, Kolja

Birkeli, Kristine

Biurrun, Idoia

Blanco-Moreno, J M

Bloodworth, Kathryn J.

Boisvert-Marsh, Laura

Lukács, Katalin

Luther-Mosebach, Jona

Macek, Petr

Marignani, Michela

Michalet, Richard

Miglécz, Tamás

Erenskjold-Moeslund, Jesper

Moeys, Karlien

Montesinos, Daniel

Moreno-Jiménez, Eduardo

Boldgiv, Bazartseren

Brancalion, Pedro H. S.

Brearley, Francis Q.

Brown, Charlotte

Bueno, C. Guillermo

Buffa, Gabriella

Cahill, James F.

Campos, Juan A.

Cangelmi, Giacomo

Carbognani, Michele

Moysiyenko, Ivan

Mucina, Ladislav

Muñoz-Rojas, Miriam

Murillo, Raytha A.

Nambahu, Sylvia M.

Neuenkamp, Lena

Normand, Signe

Nowak, Arkadiusz

Nuche, Paloma

Oja, Tatjana

Carcaillet, Christopher

Cerabolini, Bruno E. L.

Chevalier, Richard

Clavel, Jan S.

Costa, José M.

Cousins, Sara A. O.

Čuda, Jan

Dairel, Mariana

Dalle Fratte, Michele

Danilova, Alena

Onipchenko, Vladimir G.

Pachedjieva, Kalina L.

Paganeli, Bruno

Peco, Begoña

Peralta, Ana M. L.

Pérez-Haase, Aaron

Peri, Pablo L.

Petraglia, Alessandro

Peyre, Gwendolyn

Plaza-Álvarez, Pedro Antonio

Davison, John

Deák, Balázs

Del Vecchio, Silvia

Dembicz, Iowa

Dengler, Jürgen

Dolezal, Jiri

Domene, Xavier

Dvorsky, Miroslav

Ejtehadi, Hamid

Enrico, Lucas

Plue, Jan

Prentice, Honor C.

Prokhorov, Vadim E.

Radujković, Dajana

Rahmanian, Soroor

Reitalu, Triin

Ristow, Michael

Robin, Agnès A.

Robles, Ana Belén

Rodríguez Ginart, Daniel A.

Epikhin, Dmitrii

Eskelinen, Anu

Essl, Franz

Fan, Gaohua

Fantinato, Edy

Fazlioglu, Fatih

Fernández-Pascual, Eduardo

Ferrara, Arianna

Fidelis, Alessandra

Fischer, Markus

Román, Raúl

Roos, Ruben E.

Rosati, Leonardo

Sádlo, Jirí

Salimbayeva, Karina

Sánchez de Dios, Rut

Sanchir, Khaliun

Sattler, Cornelia

Scasta, John D.

Schmiedel, Ute

Flagmeier, Maren

Forte, T'ai G. W.

Fraser, Lauchlan H.

Fujinuma, Junichi

Furquim, Fernando F.

Garris, Berle

Garris, Heath W.

Giorgis, Melisa A.

Giusso del Galdo, Gianpietro

González-Robles, Ana

Schrader, J.

Schultz, Nick L.

Sellan, Giacomo

Serra-Diaz, Josep M.

Silan, Giulia

Skálová, Hana

Skobel, Nadiia

Sonkoly, Judit

Štajerová, Katerina

Svitková, Ivana

Good, Megan K.

Guardiola, Moisès

Guarino, Riccardo

Guerrero, Irene

Guillemot, Joannès

Güler, Behlül

Guo, Yinjie

Haesen, Stef

Hejda, Martin

Heleno, Ruben H.

Świerszcz, Sebastian

Tanentzap, Andrew J.

Tanentzap, Fallon M.

Tarifa, Rubén

Tejero, Pablo

Tekeev, Dzhamal K.

Tholin, Michael

Thormodsaeter, Ruben S.

Tian, Yichen

Tokaryuk, Alla

Hoye, Toke T.

Hrivnák, Richard

Huang, Yingxin

Hunter, John T.

Iakushenko, Dmytro

Ibáñez, Ricardo

Ingerpuu, Nele

Irl, Severin D. H.

Janíková, Eva

Jansen, Florian

Tölgyesi, Csaba

Tomaselli, Marcello

Tordoni, Enrico

Török, Péter

Tóthmérész, Béla

Toussaint, Aurèle

Touzard, Blaise

Trindade, Diego P. F.

Tsakalos, James L.

Türkis, Sevda

Valencia, Enrique

Valerio, Mercedes

Valkó, Orsolya

Van Meerbeek, Koenraad

Vandvik, Vigdis

Villellas, Jesus

Virtanen, Risto

Vítková, Michaela

Vojík, Martin

von Hessberg, Andreas

von Oppen, Jonathan

Jeltsch, Florian

Wagner, Viktoria

Jentsch, Anke

Wan, Ji-Zhong

Jiménez-Alfaro, Borja

Wang, Chun-Jing

Jõks, Madli

Wani, Sajad A.

Jouri, Mohammad H.

Weiss, Lina

Karami, Sahar

Wevill, Tricia

Katal, Negin

Xiao, Sa

Kelemen, András

Zárate Martínez, Oscar

Khairullin, Bulat I.

Zobel, Martin

Khuroo, Anzar A.

Publication date

2026-04-01T10:15:41Z

2026-04-01T10:15:41Z

2025-04-02

2026-04-01T10:15:41Z

Abstract

Anthropogenic biodiversity decline threatens the functioning of ecosystems and the many benefits they provide to humanity. As well as causing species losses in directly affected locations, human influence might also reduce biodiversity in relatively unmodified vegetation if far-reaching anthropogenic effects trigger local extinctions and hinder recolonization. Here we show that local plant diversity is globally negatively related to the level of anthropogenic activity in the surrounding region. Impoverishment of natural vegetation was evident only when we considered community completeness: the proportion of all suitable species in the region that are present at a site. To estimate community completeness, we compared the number of recorded species with the dark diversity—ecologically suitable species that are absent from a site but present in the surrounding region. In the sampled regions with a minimal human footprint index, an average of 35% of suitable plant species were present locally, compared with less than 20% in highly affected regions. Besides having the potential to uncover overlooked threats to biodiversity, dark diversity also provides guidance for nature conservation. Species in the dark diversity remain regionally present, and their local populations might be restored through measures that improve connectivity between natural vegetation fragments and reduce threats to population persistence.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08814-5

Nature, 2025, vol. 641, p. 917-940

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08814-5

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

(c) Nature Publishing Group, 2025

This item appears in the following Collection(s)