Endemic Seed Plants in the Bahamian Archipelago
Abstract:
The Bahamian archipelago consists of approximately 2,400 islands occurring in the Atlantic Ocean off the coasts of Florida, Cuba, and Hispaniola. In 1982 Donovan Correll and Helen Correll published the most current synopsis of the floristic diversity of this island chain. Their publication cited a total of 1,371 vascular plant species of which 114 seed plants were listed as endemic to the archipelago (~8 % of the native flora). In the last 30 years, additional herbarium collections and taxonomic studies have shown that a number of species previously indicated to be endemic to these islands also occur in other regions or have been taxonomically merged into other species. The current number of species considered endemic to the Bahamian archipelago is 89 (~6 % of the total flora). There are 50 endemic species that have a known distribution on one (31 species) or two island groupings (19 species). Biogeographical analyses of endemic plant distributions shows three distinct clusters of species: southern, central, and the northern islands, with a fourth cluster that includes islands with a small area and one medium size island that seems that has been underexplored (i.e., Little Inagua). We anticipate that understanding the conservation status of endemic species and their distributions will help to develop legislation to preserve this Bahamian natural heritage.
Año de publicación:
2014
Keywords:
- West Indies
- Biogeography
- Tropical Islands
- biodiversity hotspots
- Caribbean islands
- Plant conservation
Fuente:
Tipo de documento:
Article
Estado:
Acceso restringido
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Botánica
- Biodiversidad
- Botánica
Áreas temáticas:
- Eudicotas y Ceratofilales
- Temas específicos de la historia natural de las plantas
- Ecología