Regional Sustainability ›› 2026, Vol. 7 ›› Issue (1): 100294.doi: 10.1016/j.regsus.2026.100294

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Vascular plant diversity and distribution pattern in Tajikistan: A global hotspot of diversity

ZHOU Yixina,b,c, MA Suliyad, LI Wenjuna,b,c,*(), Parvina KURBONOVAe, Mariyo BOBOEVf, LI Yufang, Hikmat HISORIEVh, MA Kepingb, YANG Weikanga,b,c, ZHANG Yuanminga,b,c   

  1. aChina-Tajikistan Belt and Road Joint Laboratory on Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable Use, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi, 830011, China
    bXinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi, 830011, China
    cCollege of Resources and Environment, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100049, China
    dInner Mongolia University of Technology, Hohhot, 010051, China
    eTajik National University, Rudaki Avenue, Dushanbe, 734025, Tajikistan
    fKhatlon Scientific Center of the National Academy of Tajikistan, Kulob Botanic Garden, Kuljab, 735360, Tajikistan
    gNortheast Forestry University, Harbin, 150040, China
    hInstitute of Botany, Plant Physiology and Genetics, National Academy of Tajikistan, Dushanbe, 734017, Tajikistan
  • Received:2025-08-31 Revised:2025-12-08 Accepted:2026-01-05 Published:2026-02-28 Online:2026-01-21
  • Contact: LI Wenjun E-mail:liwenjunao@ms.xjb.ac.cn
  • About author:First author contact:

    The first and second authors contributed equally to this work

Abstract:

Tajikistan represents a core region of the biodiversity hotspot in Central Asian mountains and has exceptional vascular plant diversity. However, the species diversity of the country faces urgent conservation challenges. There has been a lack of a comprehensive and multidimensional assessment to inform strategic conservation planning. Therefore, this study integrated 4 key biodiversity indices including species richness (SR), phylogenetic diversity (PD), threatened species richness (TSR), and endemic species richness (ESR) to map species diversity distribution patterns, identify conservation gaps, and elucidate their effects of climatic factors. This study revealed that species diversity shows a clear trend of decreasing from the western region to the eastern region of Tajikistan. The central-western mountains (specifically the Gissar-Darvasian and Zeravshanian regions) emerge as irreplaceable biodiversity hotspots. However, we found a severe spatial mismatch between these priority areas and the existing protected areas (PAs). Protection coverage for all hotspots was alarmingly low, ranging from 31.00% to 38.00%. Consequently, a critical 64.80% of integrated priority areas fall outside of the current PAs, representing a major conservation gap. This study identified precipitation seasonality and isothermality as the principal drivers, collectively explaining over 50.00% of the diversity variation and suggesting high vulnerability to hydrological shifts. Furthermore, we detected significant geographic sampling bias in the public biodiversity databases, with the most critical hotspot being systematically under-sampled. This study provides a robust scientific basis for conservation action, highlighting the urgent need to strategically expand PAs in the under-protected southwestern region and to mitigate critical sampling gaps through targeted data digitization and field surveys. These measures are indispensable for securing Tajikistan’s unique biodiversity and achieving the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework Target 3 (“30×30 Protection”).

Key words: Vascular plant, Species diversity, Distribution pattern, Conservation gaps, Tajikistan