In absolute terms, the NE pool tends to grow because new species are described faster than they can be formally assessed, and assessment capacity is constrained by funding, data availability, and taxonomic expertise. Although IUCN assessments are increasing over time, they generally do not keep pace with ongoing species discovery and the very large backlog of undescribed/poorly known diversity (especially among invertebrates and fungi).
Geographic Patterns: NE species are concentrated where biodiversity is high and baseline survey/monitoring is limited: tropical forests (Amazon Basin, Congo Basin, Southeast Asia, New Guinea), tropical mountain regions with high endemism (e.g., Andes, Southeast Asian highlands), and remote/under-sampled systems such as deep-sea habitats, complex coral-reef-associated fauna, and many tropical freshwater basins. Small islands and karst/cave systems also contribute disproportionately because they contain many narrowly endemic species that are often newly described and data-poor.