Planet Earth could be home to millions fewer species than previously thought, new research has claimed.
Around 16 million fewer types of beetles and 30 million fewer types of terrestrial arthropods than calculated in the 1980s could actually exist, a study by researchers at Griffith University says.
By developing a more accurate measurement of specie numbers, scientists hope to discover the impact humans are having on extinction levels.
The study of beetles and insects - which constitute more than half of all the world's species - used a new method of creating estimates by examining body size.
Professor Nigel Stork concluded that around 10 per cent of the world's beetles had been identified by comparing the changing body size of the British beetle to the mean body size of a worldwide sample from London's Natural History Museum.
The body-size approach is one of four newer methods of estimation which have come into use since 2001 - compared to two used several decades ago - which are believed to yield more precise results.
His figures have drastically lowered previous projections of total species numbers - suggesting a mean of 1.5 million types of beetles, compared to the previous estimate of 17.5 million from the 1980s.
Previously, it was believed there were approximately 36.8 million kinds of terrestrial arthropod, compared to the mean of 6.8 million suggested by new research.
Professor Stork told the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, which published his paper: "By narrowing down how many species exist within the largest group - the insects and other arthropods - we are now in a position to try to improve estimates for all species - including plants, fungi and vertebrates."
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