In 1833, John Obadiah Westwood, a British entomologist, tried to guess how many species of insects there are on Earth. He extrapolated from England to Earth as a whole. "If we say 400,000, we shall, perhaps, not be very wide of the truth," he wrote. Today, scientists have found over a million species of insects and keep finding more every year.
The question of how many species there are on Earth has been a tricky one ever since Westwood's day. I've written a story for the New York Times about a new estimate that was published today: 8.7 million.
What makes the paper particularly interesting is that it introduces a new method for estimating biodiversity. The method is based on Linnean taxonomy. While we have lots of new species left to find, we may have found most of the classes, orders, and phyla. It turns out that for a number of groups–mammals, birds, and so on–the numbers of each of these rankings rise as you descend the hierarchy.
Here's a diagram that summarizes this striking pattern (courtesy of the Census of Marine Life). I couldn't fit it into the story, so I thought I'd show it here:
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Published on August 23, 2011 16:41