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R. R. Thaman

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Title: DISPERSAL OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS (See lecture notes in Class Handout!!) Author: user Last modified by: comlabs Created Date: 8/9/2005 12:47:23 AM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: R. R. Thaman


1
ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY
  • R. R. Thaman
  • GE301/407 Applied/Advanced Island Biogeography
    and Ethnobiology

2
ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY
  • The Study of the distribution, composition and
    abundance (including absence) of island
    biodiversity
  • The study of island ecosystems, species,
    taxonomic and genetic diversity.

3
ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY
  • Attempts to explain the reasons/factors
    responsible for these patterns and the nature of
    island biotas (flora, fauna and microbiota).
  • Attempts to explain Richness and Poverty of
    species.

4
ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY
  • Also interested in the impact of human societies
    on island biogeography
  • ETHNOBIODIVERSITY (the study of the knowledge,
    uses, management systems, beliefs and language
    that island cultures have for their biodiversity)
    . . .
  • Because island cultures have co-evolved with
    their biodiversity.
  •  

5
ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY
  • Islands as unique ecological laboratories, where
    simple ecosystems can be studied more easily than
    continental ecosystems.
  • Islands as laboratories for the study of
    evolution and co-evolution (HIGH ENDEMISM).
  • The theory of evolution was based on Charles
    Darwins study of the island biota of the
    Galapagos Islands and Wallaces study of the
    islands of Indonesia (MALESIA) and the Indian
    Ocean.

6
Island Arks largely responsible for Darwin and
Wallace challenging the biblical ark of
Christendom and the formulation of their theory
on the evolution of new life forms
7
  • . . . it is not too much to say that when we
    have mastered the difficulties presented by the
    peculiarities of island life we shall find it
    comparatively easy to deal with the more complex
    and less clearly defined problems of continental
    distribution . . .

Alfred Russel Wallace Island Life (1902 242 in
Whittaker 1998)
8
Equilibrium Theory of IBG
  • Two eminent ecologists, the late Robert MacArthur
    of Princeton University and E. 0. Wilson of
    Harvard, developed a theory of "island
    biogeography" to explain uneven distributions in
    the RICHNESS (numbers) of species of a given taxa
    on islands.

9
Equilibrium Theory of IBG
  • They proposed that the maximum number of species
    on any island (EQUILIBRIAL NUMBER) reflects a
    balance between
  • IMMIGRATION the rate at which new species
    colonize it (HIGH IN THE BEGINNING), and,
  • EXTINCTION the rate at which populations of
    established species become extinct (LOW IN THE
    BEGINNING).

10
Theory of IBG
  • EXAMPLE If a new volcanic island were to rise
    out of the ocean off the coast of a mainland
    inhabited by 100 species of birds, some birds
    would begin to immigrate across the gap and
    establish populations on the empty island.
  • After a while some would begin to become extinct
  • REAL CASE Catastrophic eruption of Krakatoa Is.
    between Java and Sumatra (Indonesia) in 1883.

11
Theory of IBG
  • The rate at which these immigrant species could
    become established, however, would decline over
    time because
  • Each species that successfully invades the island
    will reduce by one the pool of possible future
    invaders
  • In other words, the same 100 species continue to
    live on the mainland, but those which have
    already become residents of the island can no
    longer be considered to be potential invaders.

12
Theory of IBG
  • The rate at which additional species will
    establish populations will be high when the
    island is relatively empty, and the rate at which
    resident populations go extinct will be high when
    the island is relatively full.
  • Thus, there must be a point between 0 and 100
    species (the number on the mainland) where the
    two rates are equal -- where new input from
    immigration balances output from extinction.

13
Theory of IBG
  • Equally, the extinction on the island would be
    related to the number that have become residents.
  • When an island is nearly empty, the extinction
    rate is low because few species are available to
    compete with each other or be killed off by
    extreme events and become extinct.
  • And since the resources of an island are limited,
    as the number of resident species increases, the
    smaller and more prone to extinction the
    individual populations of each species are likely
    to become.

14
Theory of IBG
  • That equilibrium number of species would be
    expected to remain constant as long as the
    factors determining the two rates did not change.
  • But the exact species present should change
    continuously as some species go extinct and
    others invade (including some that have
    previously gone extinct), so that there is a
    steady turnover (SPECIES TURNOVER) in the
    composition of the fauna.

15
Theory of IBG
  • This is the essence of the MacArthur-Wilson
    equilibrium theory of island biogeography.
  • How well does it explain what we actually observe
    in nature?

16
RECOLONIZATION OF KRAKATAU (Krakatoa)
  • One famous "test" of the theory was provided in
    1883 by a catastrophic volcanic explosion that
    devastated the island of Krakatoa, located
    between the islands of Sumatra and Java.
  • The flora and fauna of its remnant and of two
    adjacent islands were completely exterminated,
    yet within 25 years (1908) thirteen species of
    birds had recolonized what was left of the
    island.
  • By 1919-21 twenty-eight bird species were
    present, and by 1932-34, twenty-nine.
  • Between the explosion and 1934, thirty-four
    species actually became established, but five of
    them went extinct.

17
Theory of IBG
  • By 1951-52 thirty-three species were present, and
    by 1984-85, thirty-five species.
  • During the half century (1934-1985), a further
    fourteen species had become established, and
    eight had become extinct.

18
Theory of IBG
  • As the theory predicted, the rate of increase
    declined as more and more species colonized the
    island.
  • In addition, as equilibrium was approached there
    was some species turnover. The number of bird
    species remained roughly the same while the
    species COMPOSITION gradually changed.

19
Theory of IBG
  • The theory predicts other things, too.
  • For instance, everything else being equal,
    distant islands will have lower immigration rates
    than those close to a mainland, and equilibrium
    will occur with fewer species on distant islands.
  • Close islands will have high immigration rates
    and support more species AT EQUILIBIRUM.

20
Theory of IBG
  • By similar reasoning, large islands, with their
    lower extinction rates, will have more species
    than small ones -- again everything else being
    equal (which it frequently is not, for larger
    islands often have a greater variety of habitats
    and more species for that reason).

21
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22
Characteristics of Island Biotas/Biodiversity
  • Island biotas/ecosystems are often disharmonic
    (missing major types or groups of
    organisms/missing major taxa).
  • Large predators (carnivores)
  • Large herbivores
  • Ants (e.g., Hawaii had no native ants)
  • Birds of prey/raptors (hawks, eagles, etc.)
  • Aggressive weeds
  • Disease organisms (e.g., influenza, whooping
    cough and measles, which decimated Pacific
    Islands human populations and avian malaria that
    devastated HawaiIs endemic birds

23
Characteristics of Island Biotas/Biodiversity
  • They have smaller population sizes than
    continental ecosystems
  • Have limited genetic diversity within the
    population because they have descended from a
    single or limited number of founder species/the
    founder population (FOUNDER EFFECT)
  • these small populations are more prone to
    extinction (total extinction) and extirpation
    (local extinction).

24
Characteristics of Island Biotas/Biodiversity
  • There is a high degree of endemism ( of unique
    plants and animals that are found nowhere else),
    because of the process of adaptive radiation and
    ecological release into unexploited or
    inadequately filled HABITATS and NICHES.
  • Many islands are considered to be global
    BIODIVERSITY HOTSPOTS

25
Characteristics of Island Biotas/Biodiversity
  • There is also a very low level, or absence, of
    endemism ( of unique plants and animals that are
    found nowhere else) on atolls and small low-lying
    islands, which are usually populated with
    ubiquitous pantropical or pan-Pacific plants
    and animals.
  • Many are considered to be global BIODIVERSITY
    COOLSPOTS

26
Characteristics of Island Biotas/Biodiversity
  • Island ecosystems are usually very fragile
    because they have evolved in a state of less
    competition, usually because of disharmony and
    because they have small populations (total number
    of individuals of a given species) and limited
    genetic diversity within populations.

27
Factors Controlling Island Biodiversity
  • Dispersability of plants, animals (vertebrates
    and invertebrates) and microorganisms.
  • Distance of island (SPECIES-DISTANCE EFFECT)from
    source areas and centers of diversity
  • Richness of the source area of colonizing
    organisms.

28
Factors Controlling Island Biodiversity
  • Size of island (SPECIES-AREA EFFECT) leads to
    greater chance of colonization, greater habitat
    diversity, more space, greater protection from
    coastal marine influences, greater habitat and
    microhabitat diversity and higher population
    numbers
  • Elevation/topography greater habitat and
    climatic diversity

29
Factors Controlling Island Biodiversity
  • Island type or substrate continental, plate
    boundary volcanic, hotspot volcanic, raised
    limestone, low-lying atolls and limestone islands
    and sand cays
  • Geologic age Ancient continental and volcanic
    islands, ancient limestone islands and recent
    volcanic islands.

30
Factors Controlling Island Biodiversity
  • Climate (moisture, temperature, latitude/day
    length, winds, etc.)
  • Frequency and severity of extreme events
    (tropical cyclones, droughts, floods, tsunamis,
    volcanic eruptions, disease outbreaks)

31
Factors Controlling Island Biodiversity
  • Nature of ocean currents (e.g., for dispersal of
    plankton and planktonic larval stages of marine
    organismsceanic
  • Wind patterns (e.g., for the dispersal of birds,
    bats, insects and atmospheric plankton (very
    small insects and microorganisms).

32
Factors Controlling Island Biodiversity
  • IMPACT OF HUMANS
  • A. overexploitation
  • B. habitat destruction
  • C. introductions of exotic alien plants and
    animals (deliberately and accidentally)
  • D. pollution

33
Basic Patterns in the Biogeography of the Pacific
Islands.
  • Western relationships (affinity) of PIBD
    (relationships to Asia, Malesia and the Indo-West
    Pacific)
  • Diversity gradient form west to east (attenuation
    of species and taxa)
  • Gradual elimination of major groups of plants and
    animals from west to east in both the marine and
    terrestrial environment (i.e., increasing
    disharmony).

34
Basic Patterns in the Biogeography of the Pacific
Islands.
  • Very high endemism on high isolated islands.
  • Greater endemism among terrestrial and freshwater
    organisms than among marine organisms (gene flow
    and dispersal more restricted in the terrestrial
    and freshwater)
  • Very low or no endemism on atolls and small
    low-lying islands  

35
Basic Patterns in the Biogeography of the Pacific
Islands.
  • Increasing taxonomic (compositional) and
    structural complexity on larger, older islands.
  • Changes in sea level (EUSTATIC) have affected the
    genetic background and the nature of the biotas
    and biodiversity of terrestrial, freshwater and
    marine biodiversity in the greater Indo-Pacific
    Biogeographical
  •  

36
Basic Patterns in the Biogeography of the Pacific
Islands.
  • Importance of successional change on islands due
    to natural and artificial disturbance.
  • Primary and secondary successions
  • r-adapted and K-adapted species
  • The TAXON CYCLE ON islands and the gradual change
    for r-adapted species and evolution or change to
    specialized K-adapted endemics
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