A growing number of examples show that humans not only contribute to the extinction of species but also drive evolution, and in some cases the emergence of entirely new species, said researchers at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark.
This can take place through mechanisms such as accidental introductions, domestication of animals and crops, unnatural selection due to hunting, or the emergence of novel ecosystems such as the urban environment.
"Indeed, many people might find the prospect of an artificially biodiverse world just as daunting as an artificially impoverished one," Bull said.
The study highlights numerous examples of how human activities influence species' evolution.
For instance: as the common house mosquito adapted to the environment of the underground railway system in London, it established a subterranean population.
Now named the 'London Underground mosquito', it can no longer interbreed with its above ground counterpart and is effectively thought to be a new species.
Due to the latter, more new plant species in Europe have appeared than are documented to have gone extinct over the last three centuries.
Although it is not possible to quantify exactly how many speciation events have been caused through human activities, the impact is potentially considerable, researchers said.
Achieving a neutral net outcome for species numbers cannot be considered acceptable if weighing wild fauna against relatively homogenous domesticated species, they said.
Researchers do agree that current extinction rates may soon lead to a 6th period of mass extinction. Since the last Ice Age, 11,500 years ago, it is estimated that 255 mammals and 523 bird species have gone extinct, often due to human activity, said researchers.
In the same period, humans have relocated almost 900 known species and domesticated more than 470 animals and close to 270 plant species, they said.
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