This infographic was based on The Biomass Distrbution on Earth, which was published in 2018 by Y. M. Bar-On, R. Phillips, and R. Milo.
This paper attempted to give a rough estimate of the biomass of various taxa on Earth. The exact granularity of the taxon being measured varied based on the available data. For mammals, the authors separated the data into 3 classes:
Humans
Livestock
Wild mammals
The newly published paper improves on this by providing a more detailed breakdown of mammal biomass as well as individual counts.
Comparison of Previously Reported Categories
The old paper reported biomass in terms of dry carbon. The new paper uses wet mass, which includes both water and non-carbon content.
For consistency, we’ll use the dry carbon values for both papers. The authors state that an frac16is an appropriate conversion factor from wet mass to dry carbon.
Using this conversion factor, here’s how much the overall estimates changed between the 2018 and 2023 papers:
Taxon
2018 (Megatons Carbon)
2023 (Megatons Carbon)
Change
Human
60
65
+8.3%
Livestock
100
105
+5%
Wild Mammals
7
10
+42%
Discussion
Bats
One surprising result is the number of bats. Looking at the source data here, we observe that there are about 55.802 billion wild bats. Overall, bats make up 2⁄3 of of wild mammal individuals. The next most popular taxon, Rodentia, only has 25.882 billion indviduals.
This has implications for wild animal welfare. While rodent welfare has been mentioned before, bat welfare is not very popular: I haven’t found any resources relating to it so far.
Some research topics which are worth looking into:
Which kind of bats make up most of the population?
Microbats or megabats?
How much do bats suffer?
Are there tractable ways to reduce bat suffering?
Livestock
I was looking to see if they had individual counts for domesticated mammals as well, but I couldn’t find it. According to the appendix, the methodology for calculating the individual counts of livestock was to retrieve them from the FAO.
I retreived the data for the year 2021, and plotted it:
Bar Plot:
(You can view the associated jupyter notebook here)
I suspect that the bee count is probably an underestimate. The rest of the numbers seem reasonable though.
[Linkpost] The global biomass of wild mammals
Link post
New Data
The following infographics are excerpted from the paper:
Background
The following Our World in Data image has been fairly popular:
(Link to accompanying article: https://ourworldindata.org/life-on-earth )This infographic was based on The Biomass Distrbution on Earth, which was published in 2018 by Y. M. Bar-On, R. Phillips, and R. Milo.
This paper attempted to give a rough estimate of the biomass of various taxa on Earth. The exact granularity of the taxon being measured varied based on the available data. For mammals, the authors separated the data into 3 classes:
Humans
Livestock
Wild mammals
The newly published paper improves on this by providing a more detailed breakdown of mammal biomass as well as individual counts.
Comparison of Previously Reported Categories
The old paper reported biomass in terms of dry carbon. The new paper uses wet mass, which includes both water and non-carbon content.
For consistency, we’ll use the dry carbon values for both papers. The authors state that an frac16is an appropriate conversion factor from wet mass to dry carbon.
Using this conversion factor, here’s how much the overall estimates changed between the 2018 and 2023 papers:
Discussion
Bats
One surprising result is the number of bats. Looking at the source data here, we observe that there are about 55.802 billion wild bats. Overall, bats make up 2⁄3 of of wild mammal individuals. The next most popular taxon, Rodentia, only has 25.882 billion indviduals.
This has implications for wild animal welfare. While rodent welfare has been mentioned before, bat welfare is not very popular: I haven’t found any resources relating to it so far.
Some research topics which are worth looking into:
Which kind of bats make up most of the population?
Microbats or megabats?
How much do bats suffer?
Are there tractable ways to reduce bat suffering?
Livestock
I was looking to see if they had individual counts for domesticated mammals as well, but I couldn’t find it. According to the appendix, the methodology for calculating the individual counts of livestock was to retrieve them from the FAO.
I retreived the data for the year 2021, and plotted it:
Bar Plot:
(You can view the associated jupyter notebook here)I suspect that the bee count is probably an underestimate. The rest of the numbers seem reasonable though.