South America holds the greatest diversity of native daisies (Asteraceae) in the world: an updated catalogue supporting continental-scale conservation

Front Plant Sci. 2024 May 30:15:1393241. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1393241. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Asteraceae is the world's richest plant family and is found on all continents, in environments ranging from the coast to the highest mountains. The family shows all growth forms and, as in other angiosperm families, species richness is concentrated in tropical regions. South America has the highest diversity of Asteraceae in the world, yet taxonomic and distributional knowledge gaps remain. This study compiles an updated catalog of Asteraceae native to South America, based on national and regional checklists and ongoing large-scale flora projects. The resulting checklist includes a total of 6,940 species and 564 genera native to South America to date, which represent about a quarter of the family's global diversity. Countries already considered to be megadiverse show the greatest diversity, such as Brazil with 2,095 species, followed by Peru (1,588), Argentina (1,377), and Colombia (1,244), with this diversity mainly focused on the Brazilian Highlands and the Andes. Species endemism also peaks in Brazil, but Sørensen distances reveal the Chilean flora to be eminently different from the rest of the continent. Tribes better represented in the continent are Eupatorieae, Senecioneae and Astereae, also with a remarkably presence of entirely South American subfamilies representing earliest diverging lineages of the Asteraceae, such as Barnadesioideae, Wunderlichioideae, Famatinanthoideae, and Stifftioideae. It is estimated that the discovery and description curves have not yet stabilized, and the number of species is likely to increase by 5 to 10% in the coming years, posing major challenges to continental-scale conservation.

Keywords: Andes; Brazilian Plateau; Compositae (Asteraceae); IUCN; diversity; large-scale conservation; megadiverse countries.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. National Research and Development Agency (ANID-Chile) grant FONDECYT 1221879 (AM-M). Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior Brasil (CAPES) finance Code 001) for the PNPD scholarship (MM). FAPEMIG (APQ 00525—021)/FAPESP (20/02207—5) (JN). National Agency for Scientific and Technological Promotion (ANPCyT, Argentina, PICT—2019—03011) (VS, JF-C, DG) and (PICT—2019—02319) (AM-M, MG, VM-F, VS, JF-C, DG). Systematics Research Fund 2015/16, the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development—CNPq (PQ2 314590/2020) (GH), LinnéSys 2021 (GH), and WoRMS Philanthropy Grants 2022 (GH).