More than a thousand new species –nearly one-quarter of which are new toscience – have been discovered in Norway since a unique effort to find andname all of the country's species began in 2009.
The Norwegian Taxonomy Initiative is one of just two government effortsworldwide where scientists are being funded to find and catalogue the country's true species diversity.
The Norwegian initiative is focused on describing poorly known species groups across the country's varied habitats, from its alpine plateaus to the northernmost reaches of the island archipelago of Spitsbergen.
The 1165 species discovered range from new species of insects and lichens to new species of molluscs and cold-water sponges. The information gives scientists and policymakers a better platform for understanding of the complexity and function of Norway's ecosystems.
"These are very good results that provide new knowledge of both individualspecies and ecosystems," says Ivar Myklebust, director of the NorwegianBiodiversity Information Centre, which is coordinating the taxonomy initiativeon commission from the Norwegian Ministry of the Environment.
Scientists believe that there are roughly 55 000 species in Norway, but until nowonly 41 000 have been discovered. The 1165 new species discovered by thetaxonomy initiative over the last four years are thus an important addition tothis number. However, it will take time before the species that are thought to benew to science can be added to this list. These newly discovered species mustfirst be given a scientific name and a description of the species must be published in a scientific publication.
"Norway's land, seas and coastal areas have a unique variety of landscapes andecosystems with great variation over short distances, which is rare in a globalcontext," said Tine Sundtoft, Norway's Minister of Climate and the Environment."This gives us a rich and varied flora and fauna. The Government will take ourmanagement responsibilities seriously."
A crawfish that lives on the seabed along the Norwegiancoast, Campylaspis costata is one of the 76 known species of crawfish found inNorwegian waters that we now know more about as a result of inventoriesconducted for the Norwegian Taxonomy Initiative.
(Photo Credit: Photo: Henrik Glenner, University of Bergen)
Many new insect species
The biggest discoveries have been made in the major species-rich groups whereprevious knowledge has been poor – including in the groups that include wasps, flies and mosquitoes.
Scientists believe that there are thousands of species in Norway yet to bediscovered in these groups. The figures from the taxonomy initiative shows thatnearly 60 per cent of the new species are insects or other small terrestrialinvertebrates (729 species), including 667 new species of insects, 17 new spiderspecies and 18 new springtail species.
A boost in knowledge about fungi
Fungi represent another large and species-rich group in Norway. Since 2009,scientists have found 227 new fungi species as part of the taxonomy initiative.
Some of these fungal species have been discovered using DNA analysis to clarifythe relationship between species. This has led scientists to split some speciesinto two, or to increase the species numbers from 14 to 31, as was the case for coral fungi.
New marine species
Norway's rich marine environment supplied 157 new species, including sponges, snails, slime worms, bristle worms, fish parasites, molluscs and starfish. Another 16 new species were discovered in brackish and fresh water, primarily fish parasites and small crustaceans.
Marine species are not as accessible as terrestrial species for researchers. As aresult, 48 per cent of the species found as part of the taxonomy initiative arecompletely new to the scientific world and have never before been describedscientifically.
In comparison, 18 per cent of the new terrestrial species are whatscientists call undescribed species. In some of the very poorly known marinespecies groups such as the worm-like (aplacophoran) molluscs that live on theocean floor, Aplacophora/shell less molluscs, the proportion of undescribedspecies may be as high as 90 per cent.
New knowledge about better-known species groups
Norway's landscape varies greatly in its topography, climate and habitats, whichare home to a rich lichen and moss flora, with more than 2000 species of lichensand about 11 000 species of mosses.
Aplacophorans are wormlike molluscs that live partially buried in the seabed. Simrothiella n.sp. is a to-date undescribed species that has been found in great numbers in Rijpfjorden on Svalbard.
(Photo Credit: Photo: Christiane Todt, University Museum of Bergen)
"Even though we believe that the flora of both lichens and mosses are relativelywell known, we have learned a great deal about the incidence and prevalence of both groups as a result of the initiative" says Ingrid Salvesen, senior adviser at the Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre and coordinator of theNorwegian Taxonomy Initiative.
This is partly because much of the current knowledge and species descriptions are based on very old data. DNA analyses, combined with surveys in little explored areas, have proven to be very useful.
Salvesen also says that the initiative has given scientists a better understandingof where better-known species are found and the relationships of these speciesto different habitats. This is an important cornerstone for knowledge-basedmanagement.
"Geo-referenced information records of species give us new knowledge of thehabitat that these species live in, and the organisms that they live with," Salvesen says. "That gives us the ability to better understand the complex interactions ofnature."
DNA reveals new species
DNA barcoding is a method for identifying species using differences in genetic material. The method involves comparing a short DNA sequence of anunknown organism to known sequences in a reference library.
The DNA barcodes can identify species from just tiny tissue samples, such asfrom an insect leg or a drop of blood.
A selection of the material collected by the Taxonomy Initiative has been madeavailable for DNA barcoding in collaboration with the Norwegian Barcode of Life network (NorBOL).
To date, NorBOL has registered barcodes from approximately 3800 species inNorway, over half of which have come via the Taxonomy Initiative. NorBOL ispart of a global effort to build up the reference library of DNA barcodes for more and more of the Earth's species.
The Research Council of Norway has provided funding for the country's national infrastructure for DNA barcoding up to and including 2018, which will allow for a great number of Norwegian species to be registered in the library.
Facilitator and catalyst
The major activity that has been generated by the Norwegian TaxonomyInitiative has revitalized the country's biosystematics research. A large numberof academics, experts, technicians and students from most natural scienceresearch institutions in Norway are involved in the survey work.
The project has also led to the establishment of solid, professional networks across national boundaries. Norwegian researchers have established working relationships with their colleagues in Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Estonia, the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Poland, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Georgia Spain, Canada and Japan.
42 projects in five years
The Norwegian Taxonomy Initiative has started 42 inventory projects formapping and identifying species in Norway since its inception in 2009. Abouthalf of these projects are completed or will be completed during 2013. Anothereight new projects will be initiated in 2014.
Andrews' rhizomnium moss, Rhizomniumandrewsianum, has not been seen in Norway since 1888 and has now beenlocated in the country for the second time.
(Photo Credit: Photo: Kristian Hassel, NTNUUniversity Museum)