Title: Loses of biodiversity on islands
1Loses of biodiversity on islands
2Island biodiversity
- Islands have a very high level of endemism,
contributing disproportionably to their size to
biodiversity - Many classic examples of adaptive radiation and
lineage diversification (Hawaiian orchids,
Drosophila, honeycreepers, land snails)Â may be
found among the world's islands. - For the same reason that these species are
endemic, they are very vulnerable to extinctions.
3Islands as global hotspots of biodiversity
- Out of 25 global hotspots of biodiversity 8 are
on islands Caribbean 3, Madagascar 9, Sundaland
(Malay.Indon.)16, Wallacea 17, Philippines 18,
New Caledonia 23, New Zealand 24,
Polynesia-Microneasia 25
4Islands as global hotspots of biodiversity
5Natural reduction of biodiversity
- Islands are highly vulnerable to natural
disturbances like hurricanes.  Spiller et al.
(1998) assessed responses of spiders and lizards
to disturbance caused by hurricane Lili on the
Bahama Islands. - larger bodied animals (ie. lizards) were less
vulnerable to being killed during the hurricane
than spiders, though the small-bodied
spider populations responded more quickly after
the hurricane had passed.  - extinction (or more properly extirpation) from
islands was related to population size only when
disturbance was moderate, but not when it
was intense. - After catastrophic disturbance, recovery rates of
different species were related to their dispersal
abilities. Lizards, the least capable
dispersers, were absent from many suitable
islands, likely a long-lasting effects of
catastrophes. Â
6Impact of Hurricane Lilly on Islands in the
Bahamas
- Hurricane Lili hit these islands with a 5m storm
surge and 90knot winds (Spiller 1998)
7Natural reduction of biodiversity
- The time scale and effect of disturbances can
vary greatly (Whittaker 1998)
8Natural reduction of biodiversity
- Fossil record found 0-3 vertebrate population
losses for 4000-8000 years prior to humans on the
Galapagos Islands - Bone finds in a cave on Tonga reveal little
prehuman species turnover - Despite the fact that islands are subject to
natural disasters like drought, fire and
cyclones, to date the fossil record has revealed
no major loss of species from natural causes
(Steadmann 1995)
9Natural dispersal does still occur
- Biodiversity on islands is the product of
immigration, extinction, and in situ speciation
(in some cases). - After good dispersers colonize, the rate of
new, natural species additions may be very low.
Nevertheless, it does occur. - The green iguana lizard Iguana iguana colonized
the island of Anguilla following a series of
hurricanes in the Lesser Antilles in 1995.  The
storm tracks were east-northwest. - The iguanas are believed to have originated on
the island of Guadeloupe, 300 km away Censky et
al. (1998). This lizard was previously unknown
on Anguilla.Â
10- After the storms, a large mat of logs
and uprooted - trees washed ashore on Anguilla. Based on local
- observations, it is believed that at least 3
male and 5 - female lizards were found on and around the mat
on - the beach on Anguilla. One female was in a
- reproductive condition, making it possible that
this - colony of immigrants could establish on the
island.
11Prehistoric spread of humans
- The earliest islands colonized by sea-faring
peoples were Australia, New Guinea, New Ireland,
Sulawesi (Indonesia), and the Solomon Islands
(earliest islands colonized are listed first).Â
Each of these islands were colonized at least
28,000 years ago. Each of these islands lie in,
or west of, the Melanesian Island chain.  - Further north and east, the Micronesian Islands
(Caroline Islands, Marshall Islands, Gilbert
Islands and Mariana Islands) were colonized about
4000 years ago.  - Further east and south, Fiji and New Caledonia
(both in Melanesia) and Somoa and Tonga (both
part of Polynesia) were colonized between 3500
and 3000 years ago. Further east in the
Polynesian chain, the Marquesas Islands, Cook
Islands, Hawaiian Islands, Society (Tahiti)
Islands and Easter Island were colonized
in 1500-2000, 1600, 1400, 1200, and 1000-1300
years ago, respectively. New Zealand, far south
of these island groups, was among the last island
groups colonized (800Â years ago) owing to its
extreme isolation.
12Prehistoric spread of humans in Polynesia
- Due to a low level of resolution among the human
populations, Pacific rat mtDNA was used to
reconstruct human dispersal (Matisoo-Smith et al
1998). Australia, New Guinea, New Ireland,
Indonesia, and Solomon Islands at least 28,000
years ago Micronesian Islands (Caroline Islands,
Marshall Islands, Gilbert Islands and Mariana
Islands) were colonized about 4000 years ago
Fiji, New Caledonia, Samoa and Tonga 3500 and
3000. Marquesas Islands 1500-2000, Cook Islands
1600, Hawaiian Islands 1400, Society (Tahiti)
Islands 1200 and Easter Island 1000-1300 New
Zealand, was among the last island groups
colonized (800Â years ago)
13Island extinction
The causes of bird extinctions on islands are due
to human and non-native mammal (rats, dogs and
pigs) predation. Removal or alteration of forests
through cutting, burning and introduction of
non-native plants Soil erosion through
deforestation has eliminated nesting sites for
burrowing seabirds The rate of extinction after
human arrival varied greatly from only 100 years
in many cases (iguanas and birds) (Steadman 2002)
to several thousand years, depending on island
size, habitat diversity, island ruggedness and
human population levels and continuity. Modern
extinctions caused by similar processes than
historic, only the tools have changed (Steadman
1995)
14Prehistoric extinctions
- Example of Easter Islands bird species (Steadman
1995) - On one island in the Marquesas the number of
nesting seabirds went from 22 to 4. - On one island on the Society Islands nesting
birds went from 15 to 4 - Galapagos Islands were only settled by Europeans.
Excellent fossil records show 0-3 vertebrate
population losses for 4000-8000 years prior to
humans, but 21-24 after human arrival
15Prehistoric extinctions
- Â Human colonization of Pacific Islands resulted
in large numbers of bird extinctions, numbering
2000 species (mainly flightless rails), or 20
of global bird diversity. - Particularly hard hit with extinction or
extirpation were rails, pigeons, doves, parrots
and passerines.  Seabirds (mainly shearwaters and
petrels) have suffered more from extirpation than
extinction. Processes responsible for
extinctions caused by prehistoric peoples
apparently are similar to those today. - It is estimated that 90 of extinct bird species
were inhabitants of islands - More Polynesian bird species are extinct today
from human causes than are alive today, and many
of the survivors have greatly reduced ranges
16Bird extinctions
- Decline in bird species on a Tonga Island
depending on foraging height and food type - Frugivores declined very sharply with a negative
effect on tree pollination - Ground feeders (7-0) became extinct caused by
human and non-native mammal predation Steadman
1995)
17Endemic Island Biota Extinction or Endangerments
- More than 10 of Hawaii's tremendously diverse
plant species are extinct, and another 40 are
endangered - Most of the 331 described species of endemic
Amastridae (family) snails of Hawaii are
extinct, and most of the survivors are
tree-dwelling species - The land snail fauna of the Hawaiian islands once
numbered more than 750 species (gt99 of which
were endemic to the islands), though most are
now either extinct or endangered. - The primary cause of species decline are
introduction of nonindigenous species (e.g.
carnivorous snails), and, to a lesser extent,
destruction or modification of habitat (Cowie
1998). Â
18- Argentine ants (Iridomyrmex humilis) was
introduced to - Maui (Hawai'i) 25 years ago and presently
restricts the - distributions of many gastropods and
arthropods. - Some of those arthropods are major pollinators
of - endemic plant species, predators, and
flightless taxa - (wolf spiders and Collembolans)(Cole et al.
1992). - The little red fire ant (Wasmannia auropunctata)
was - first introduced to Indefatigable (Galapagos
Islands) - early this century it has since spread to 4
other islands - in the archipelago.Â
- At least 17 of the 28 ant taxa on the Galapagos
have - limited distributions or abundances resulting
from - aggressive encounters from the little red fire
ant. It - also eliminated 1 scorpion and 2 spider species
(Lubin - 1984).
19Reasons for the high loss of biodiversity on
islands
- In a meta analysis of a number of factors
describing islands (latitude, area, elevation,
isolation, colonization), and comparing them with
the number of bird species extinct (Blackburn
Gaston 2005) - The proportion of bird species extinct was best
predicted by the isolation of an island and time
since colonisation, meaning the more isolated and
the earlier an island was colonized the more bird
species are extinct - Hence the less new migrants arrive in an
ecosystem the less its prepared to deal with them
particularly if they arrive at high rates - There is also evidence that human population
densities were higher on more isolated islands - The species most likely to become extinct were
large bodied, flightless, ground-dwelling or
ground-nesting
20Causes of Island-based Species Extinctions
- Direct habitat destruction
- Introduced Species
- Overharvesting
- Depletion of food resources
21Direct habitat destruction
- Direct habitat destruction associated with
cutting or burning of forests for agriculture,
construction, and wood extraction. All
Polynesian islands were largely or completely
forested prior to man's arrival many of these
islands have only small remnants, if any, left of
this original vegetation. - On Easter Island, loss of forest
cover corresponded not only with massive species
losses, but also in human misery.  It is believed
that the people on this island lost their
primary transportation mode (boats), and then
their food supply (marine mammals)Â following loss
of forest cover. - Archaeological records indicate a switch in diet
from marine foods to rats prior to the
civilization's demise. Soil erosion associated
with deforestation has also resulted in loss of
nesting sites for some seabirds.
22Introduced Species
- Animals such as feral goats, pigs, cats, dogs
and especially rats (European species Rattus
rattus, Rattus norvegicus Pacific species Rattus
exulans) caused major damage to native
vegetation, or competed with or preyed on native
taxa. - Some introduced plants (Miconia in Tahiti
Psidium in Tubuai, Leucaena in Marquesas, Myrica
in Hawaii) crowd out native taxa and form
monospecific stands.
23Overharvesting
- Many taxa had limited distributions (endemics)
and thus were vulnerable not only to extirpation
but also to extinction if exploited heavily. - Some flightless birds were almost certainly
driven extinct because they evolved in
the absence of mammalian predators and
competitors and were unwary (naive) of human
presence and were easily captured. - It has been speculated that easy access to these
often abundant food sources was an important
factor permitting long distance sea voyages by
Polynesians and Europeans.
24Depletion of food resources
- In some cases, extinctions were precipitated by
loss of food resources associated with
destruction of habitat or introduced species. - For example, the New Zealand eagle Harpagornis
moorei was likely dependent on moas and other
large extinct birds. - Rats (R. exulans) may have caused invertebrate
declines which reduced food supplies for the
extinct birds Aptornis and Megaegotheles.
25The island of Singapore
- On the island of Singapore, habitat loss over the
past 183 years exceeded 95! Corresponding with
this decline was a massive documented or inferred
loss of biodiversity. - Losses were highest for forest specialists
(34-87 of taxa extinct) in taxa like
butterflies, birds, fish and mammals. - Loss rates were lower (5-80) for vascular
plants, decapods, amphibians and reptiles. - More than 50 of Singapores residual native
biodiversity is sheltered in reserves that
account for only 0.25 of the island. - Extrapolation of these patterns using
species-area relationships, reveal that 13-42 of
regional populations will be lost over the coming
century, and at least half of these will be
losses of entire species (Brook et al. 2003)
26The island of Singapore
27Plant species in Tonga
- On the Island of Vavao human arrived 2600 B.P.
identified by charcoal in the sediment core
indicating burning of the hardwood forest - Increased soil erosion as documented by clay
particles in sediments - The number of frugivorous and nectarivous bird
species was reduced from 19 to 6 species after
human arrival - Among the extinct species are the two largest
pigeon species on Tonga - Several large rainforest tree species with large
seeds have lost their means of seed dispersal
(Fall 2005) - Several tree species are not present anymore
28Lizards and shrubs
- On the Island of Menorca a frugivorous lizard
became extinct after the introduction
carnivourous mammals (Traveset Riera 2005) - The lizard consumed large amounts of the shrubs
fruits and disperse them through their scat. They
were found to be the sole disperser of seeds of a
perennial shrub - On the islands without the lizard the shrub only
recruits underneath the parent plant - This is the most likely reason why this plant is
endangered
29The brown tree snake (Boiga irregularis)
- Its native in Australia and was introduced
accidentally onto Guam in the 1950s - Overall responsible for the extinction of 3 out
of 4 pelagic birds 9 out of 13 forest birds 3-5
out 12 reptile species on the Island of Guam. - This snake caused the extirpation or serious
reduction of most of the island's 25 resident
bird species on the main island of Guam. - Twelve species were likely extirpated as breeding
residents on the main island, 8 others
experienced declines of greater than or equal to
90 throughout the island or at least in the
north, and 2 were kept at reduced population
levels during all or much of the study.
30- Declines of greater than or equal to 90
occurred rapidly, - averaging just 8.9 years along three roadside
survey routes - combined and 1.6 years at a 100-ha forested
study site (Wiles et - al 2003, Rodda 1998).
31New Zealand
- The islands were colonized by humans only
1000-800 years ago because of their isolation.Â
Endemism is high on oceanic islands in this
group, though diversity is lower than on the
larger (continental) islands. - The archipelago has extraordinary biodiversity
including 75 of the world's penguins, 54 of
seabirds (albatross, petrels, and shearwater),
80Â of baleen whales, 50 of beaked whales and
36 of dolphins. The islands also support many
endemic species, including 35 of macroalgae, 55
of sponges, 45 of bryozoans, 20 of fish, and
30 of seabirds. - This tremendous diversity has resulted from the
islands' range of climates (subtropical
to subantarctic), isolation (oceanic to
continental), latitudinal diversity, and age. - Over the past 200 years, 48 of the native
avifauna has been rendered extinct owing to
habitat destruction and introduced mammals (see
below). Other factors responsible for destruction
of endemic avifauna (particularly flightless
birds) include overhunting and collections.Â
32New Zealand
- Reasons why New Zealand's biodiversity still is
high - human colonization was so recent, large
- tracts of evergreen forest remain
- introductions were limited to the mainland
- areas, thus preserving biodiversity on
- smaller, adjacent islands
- public demand for preserving species and
- restoring ecosystems.
33New Zealand
- 120 eradication programs have created 'new'
habitats for the 500Â or more species threatened
on the archipelago. New Zealanders are
also trying to rid the archipelago of ornamental
plants introduced by British colonists
'acclimatization societies'  - Reforestation programs aimed at restoring native
vegetation and habitats have proven successful,
and in some cases have helped endangered animals
recover. - For example, the black robin (Petroica traversi)
numbered only 9Â individuals in 1975 the 7 (2
breeding pairs) birds were captured in 1976-1977
and moved from its degraded habitat on Little
Mangere Island to Mangere and later to South East
Islands. These larger islands had much better
(and improving) forest conditions. The species
was on the brink of extinction (10-15
individuals) for 8 more years before eggs
were cross-fostered with Chatham Island Tits,
which increased production of black robin
fledglings. In 1992 the species totalled 120
birds.
34- Helicopter-dispersed rodenticide eliminated rats
from Red Mercury Island after the 20 resident
tuataras were removed. These individuals have
been in a captive-breeding program, and will soon
be re-established on the rat-free island. Two
rare skinks will also be reintroduced to
the island. Programs of ecological restoration
and habitat rehabilitation are ongoing on many of
the nation's islands and are critical to survival
of many endemic plants and animals. - Captive breeding programs are presently helping
two endangered flightless birds the nocturnal
parrot Kakapo (Strigops habroptilus), of which 50
individuals remain, and the gallinule Takahe
(Porphyrio mantelli), of which 150 individuals
remain (Clout and Craig 1994). These
species were both thought extinct before small
populations were found.Â
35Chatham Island black robin
tuatara
kakapo
takahe
36 Kakapo example (Elliot 2001)
The Kakapo (Strigops habrotilus) is a large
parrot (1.5-4kg) endemic to New Zealand and on of
the worlds rarest birds (62 individuals)
- Its a flightless, nocturnal, herbivorous, lek
breeder that breeds only every 2-5 years and
leaves the eggs unattended for long times - While protected from visual predators, predators
hunting by smell can are a threat. Rats and dogs
were introduced by the Polynesians and Europeans
introduced rats, cats, mustelids (ferrets and
weasels) all prey on Kakapos - Additionally the native forest is reduced in
large areas, but the main problem is predation - By the 1970 only two populations on Stewart
Island and in the Northern Fjordland remained
37- Due to high mortality of adult parrots caused by
cats, all animals were translocated to three
relatively predator free islands in the
1980s-1990s - Adult survival was between 98-99, but only three
chicks were reared until 1995, leading to a much
more intensive and intrusive management of the
species - As the Kakapo nesting seem to coincide with large
crops of fruits and seeds every 3-4 years,
supplementary feeding was used to increase the
breeding frequency. Feeding also reduced the
amount of time the female was away from the eggs. - A total of 15 chicks have fledged since 1995
38- In order to prevent any further loss of eggs or
chicks to predators all nests were continuously
monitored and traps and deterrents were used to
remove predators - Between 1981-1994 43 of the nestlings were eaten
by rats. Since intensified protection the overall
chick mortality has dropped from 75 to 29 - Potentially infertile males are removed to other
islands - The last remaining male of a different island
population was moved to an island with several
females - Eggs or chicks which were considered failing were
removed from the nests and hand reared and later
released
39Vertebrate invaders in New Zealand
40Invader control
- Removal of invasive species is an expensive and
labour intensive approach - Low level control efforts may help protect select
native species, current eradication
methods,limited conservation funds, and the
potential negative non-target impacts of
sustained control efforts all favour an intense
eradication effort, rather than a sustained
control program
- Eradication of feral pigs from Santiago Island in
the Galapagos Archipelago, Ecuador, which is the
largest insular pig removal to date - Using a combination of ground hunting and
poisoning, over 18,000 pigs were removed during
this 30-year eradication campaign
41Feral Goats
- Goats were introduced to many islands by sailors
in order to establish food sources (Saint Helena,
Juan Ferndandez, Hawaii) - Island biotas mostly evolved largely without
large mammalian herbivours, and therefore where
ill adapted - Introduced goats, changed the composition of
plant communities, caused extinctions and
accelerated soil erosion - Goats are identified as the primary threat to 26
of threatened insular plant species (IUCN) - They can be the sole reason or a contributing
factor for island extinctions - Fauna recovery after goat removal is often
dramatic even with long-standing goat populations
(for example Pinta and Santiago Islands
Galapagos) (Campell Donlan 2005) - The use of GIS aided hunting techniques and Judas
Goats greatly increased the efficency and reduced
the costs of these programs
42 43 44Conservation strategies
- New Zealand only has three native mammals, bats,
as it has been separated from Gondwana for at
least 75million years (Atkinson 2001) - Native animals and plants are not adapted to the
pressure from mammalian predators and herbivores
respectively
11 species of Moas and the large Haasts eagle
became extinct Original restoration efforts on
the smaller islands. It was immediately realized
that mammal eradication is a key part 36 near
shore islands and 16 offshore islands have been
cleared of mammals
There are also 18 mainland islands of a total
area of 28,360ha created were invasive animals
and plants are controlled in order protect natives
45 46Summary
- Large losses of biodiversity have already
occurred on islands - Many species are endangered and threatened with
extinction - Key point for conservation is the removal of
invasive species - Better and more efficient tools are available for
the removal of mammalian predators and herbivores - There are several success stories of conservation
and restoration of island habitats
47References
- Biological Conservation 99 (1) issue on
Introduced pest species and biodiversity
conservation in New Zealand several good articles - Whitaker RJ 1998. Island Biogeography, Ecology,
Evolution, and Conservation, Oxford University
Press. BOOK - Censky, E.J. et al. 1998. Over-water dispersal of
lizards due to hurricanes. Nature 395556. - Brooks TM, Mittermeier RA, Mittermeier CG, et al.
Habitat loss and extinction in the hotspots of
biodiversity CONSERVATION BIOLOGY 16 (4)
909-923 2002 - Spiller DA, Losos JB, Schoener TW Impact of a
catastrophic hurricane on island
populations SCIENCE 281 (5377) 695-697 1998 - Steadman DW, Pregill GK, Burley DV  PROCEEDINGS
OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA 99 (6) 3673-3677 2002 - Elliott GP, Merton DV, Jansen PW Intensive
management of a critically endangered species
the kakapo BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION 99 (1)
121-133 2001 - STEADMAN DW PREHISTORIC EXTINCTIONS OF PACIFIC
ISLAND BIRDS - BIODIVERSITY MEETS ZOOARCHAEOLOGYÂ
SCIENCE 267 (5201) 1123-1131 1995 - Saunders A, Norton DA Ecological restoration at
Mainland Islands in New Zealand BIOLOGICAL
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islands CONSERVATION BIOLOGY 19 (5) 1362-1374
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rainforest at Avai'o'vuna Swamp, Vava'u, Kingdom
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Zuehlke. 1992. Effects of the Argentine ant on
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48Lubin, Y.D. 1984. Changes in the native fauna of
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