Skip to main content
institutional access

You are connecting from
Lake Geneva Public Library,
please login or register to take advantage of your institution's Ground News Plan.

Published loading...Updated

Up to 16% of Planet Species Face Extinction by 2100, UC Davis Study Finds

Researchers say habitat loss, not plant movement, drives the projected decline, and 28% of Earth’s surface may gain species richness.

  • A University of California, Davis study published in the journal Science projects 7% to 16% of global plant species face extinction by 2100, driven by habitat loss rather than migration limitations.
  • Senior author Professor Xiaoli Dong of the UC Davis Department of Environmental Science and Policy explained that habitat disappearance, not plant movement speed, drives extinction rates as species must adapt to novel interactions in shifting ecosystems.
  • Yale University's Junna Wang noted that wet regions like the eastern United States and India will gain species richness, while the western United States, Australia, and Europe face significant diversity losses as species' ranges shrink.
  • Ancient lineages like California's spikemoss, dating back over 400 million years, and Australian eucalyptus face high extinction risks, threatening species vital to indigenous culture, timber industries, and biodiversity.
  • Conservationists should prioritize seed banks and botanical gardens to preserve genetic value, as assisted migration alone may prove insufficient; aggressively cutting emissions remains the most critical action to reduce extinction rates, Dong emphasized.
Insights by Ground AI

42 Articles

KAKE NewsKAKE News
+35 Reposted by 35 other sources
Center

Report warns 1 in 6 plant species could be wiped out in 75 years

The ecological modeling study shows that many plants face a "high risk" of extinction by the end of the century.

Read Full Article

A study by the University of California Davis warned that between 7% and 16% of the world’s plant species could lose more than 90% of their habitat and face a high risk of extinction by 2100 due to climate change. The research, published in Science magazine, concluded that the main problem will not be the ability of plants to move to other areas, but the disappearance of suitable areas to survive. Scientists analyzed almost 68,000 plant species,…

Read Full Article
Think freely.Subscribe and get full access to Ground NewsSubscriptions start at $9.99/yearSubscribe

Bias Distribution

  • 50% of the sources are Center
50% Center

Factuality Info Icon

To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

Ownership

Info Icon

To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage

UC Davis broke the news on Thursday, May 7, 2026.
Too Big Arrow Icon
Sources are mostly out of (0)

Similar News Topics

News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal