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      A new IUCN Red List of the bryophytes of Britain, 2023

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      Journal of Bryology
      Informa UK Limited

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          Assessing Extinction Threats: Toward a Reevaluation of IUCN Threatened Species Categories

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            The value of the IUCN Red List for conservation.

            The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species is the most comprehensive resource detailing the global conservation status of plants and animals. The 2004 edition represents a milestone in the four-decade long history of the Red List, including the first Global Amphibian Assessment and a near doubling in assessed species since 2000. Moreover, the Red List assessment process itself has developed substantially over the past decade, extending the value of the Red List far beyond the assignation of threat status. We highlight here how the Red List, in conjunction with the comprehensive data compiled to support it and in spite of several important limitations, has become an increasingly powerful tool for conservation planning, management, monitoring and decision making.
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              Wind as a long-distance dispersal vehicle in the Southern Hemisphere.

              Anisotropic (direction-dependent) long-distance dispersal (LDD) by wind has been invoked to explain the strong floristic affinities shared among landmasses in the Southern Hemisphere. Its contribution has not yet been systematically tested because of the previous lack of global data on winds. We used global winds coverage from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration SeaWinds scatterometer to test whether floristic similarities of Southern Hemisphere moss, liverwort, lichen, and pteridophyte floras conform better with (i) the anisotropic LDD hypothesis, which predicts that connection by "wind highways" increases floristic similarities, or (ii) a direction-independent LDD hypothesis, which predicts that floristic similarities among sites increase with geographic proximity. We found a stronger correlation of floristic similarities with wind connectivity than with geographic proximities, which supports the idea that wind is a dispersal vehicle for many organisms in the Southern Hemisphere.

                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Journal of Bryology
                Journal of Bryology
                Informa UK Limited
                0373-6687
                1743-2820
                October 02 2022
                April 19 2023
                October 02 2022
                : 44
                : 4
                : 271-389
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Bryophyte Surveys Ltd, Almondsbury, South Gloucestershire BS32 4DU, UK
                Article
                10.1080/03736687.2023.2185393
                0f51fc11-a367-4d5e-9db9-eb194b4f4a80
                © 2022
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