TY - JOUR
T1 - STATE OF THE AMPHIBIA 2020: A REVIEW OF FIVE YEARS OF AMPHIBIAN RESEARCH AND EXISTING RESOURCES
T2 - A Review of Five Years of Amphibian Research and Existing Resources
AU - Womack, Molly C.
AU - Steigerwald, Emma
AU - Blackburn, David C.
AU - Cannatella, David C.
AU - Catenazzi, Alessandro
AU - Che, Jing
AU - Koo, Michelle S.
AU - McGuire, Jimmy A.
AU - Ron, Santiago R.
AU - Spencer, Carol L.
AU - Vredenburg, Vance T.
AU - Tarvin, Rebecca D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Authors. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/11/3
Y1 - 2022/11/3
N2 - Amphibians are a clade of over 8,400 species that provide unique research opportunities and challenges. With amphibians undergoing severe global declines, we posit that assessing our current understanding of amphibians is imperative. Focusing on the past five years (2016-2020), we examine trends in amphibian research, data, and systematics. New species of amphibians continue to be described at a pace of â 150 per year. Phylogenomic studies are increasing, fueling a growing consensus in the amphibian tree of life. Over 3,000 species of amphibians are now represented by expert-curated accounts or data in AmphibiaWeb, AmphibiaChina, BIOWEB, or the Amphibian Disease Portal. Nevertheless, many species lack basic natural history data (e.g., diet records, morphological measurements, call recordings) and major gaps exist for entire amphibian clades. Genomic resources appear on the cusp of a rapid expansion, but large, repetitive amphibian genomes still pose significant challenges. Conservation continues to be a major focus for amphibian research, and threats cataloged on AmphibiaWeb for 1,261 species highlight the need to address land use change and disease using adaptive management strategies. To further promote amphibian research and conservation, we underscore the importance of database integration and suggest that other understudied or imperiled clades would benefit from similar assessments of existing data.
AB - Amphibians are a clade of over 8,400 species that provide unique research opportunities and challenges. With amphibians undergoing severe global declines, we posit that assessing our current understanding of amphibians is imperative. Focusing on the past five years (2016-2020), we examine trends in amphibian research, data, and systematics. New species of amphibians continue to be described at a pace of â 150 per year. Phylogenomic studies are increasing, fueling a growing consensus in the amphibian tree of life. Over 3,000 species of amphibians are now represented by expert-curated accounts or data in AmphibiaWeb, AmphibiaChina, BIOWEB, or the Amphibian Disease Portal. Nevertheless, many species lack basic natural history data (e.g., diet records, morphological measurements, call recordings) and major gaps exist for entire amphibian clades. Genomic resources appear on the cusp of a rapid expansion, but large, repetitive amphibian genomes still pose significant challenges. Conservation continues to be a major focus for amphibian research, and threats cataloged on AmphibiaWeb for 1,261 species highlight the need to address land use change and disease using adaptive management strategies. To further promote amphibian research and conservation, we underscore the importance of database integration and suggest that other understudied or imperiled clades would benefit from similar assessments of existing data.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85146861997&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1643/h2022005
DO - 10.1643/h2022005
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85146861997
SN - 2766-1512
VL - 110
SP - 638
EP - 661
JO - Ichthyology and Herpetology
JF - Ichthyology and Herpetology
IS - 4
ER -