4.6 Article

High evolutionary and functional distinctiveness of endemic monocots in world islands

Journal

BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
Volume 30, Issue 12, Pages 3697-3715

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-021-02272-x

Keywords

Functional distinctiveness; Evolutionary distinctiveness; Island biogeography; Monocotyledons; Range restriction

Funding

  1. French State through the National Reasearch Agency under the LabEx [ANR-10-LABX-0003-BCDiv, ANR-11-IDEX-0004-02]

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This study assesses the evolutionary and functional distinctiveness of insular monocotyledons and finds that these characteristics are decoupled but higher on islands than on continental areas. The most distinct species on islands are range-restricted, indicating potential differences in dispersal potential. Islands, as threatened systems, are crucial for conservation to prevent loss of phylogenetic and functional diversity.
Functionally and evolutionarily distinct species have traits or an evolutionary history that are shared by few others in a given set, which make them priority species for biodiversity conservation. On islands, life in isolation has led to the evolution of many distinct forms and functions as well as to a high level of endemism. The aim of this study is to assess the evolutionary and functional distinctiveness of insular monocotyledons and their distribution across 126 islands worldwide. We show that evolutionary and functional distinctiveness are decoupled but that both are higher on islands than on continental areas. Anagenesis on islands followed by extinctions and/or diversification on the mainland may have led to highly evolutionarily distinct species while functionally distinct species may have arisen from ecological niche shift or niche expansion. Insular endemic species with high evolutionary distinctiveness but not with high functional distinctiveness are significantly range-restricted compared to less distinct species, possibly indicating differences in dispersal potential. By showing that distinctiveness is high on islands and that the most distinct species are range-restricted, our study has important conservation implications. Indeed, islands are among the most threatened systems of the world, and extinctions of the most distinct species could lead to significant loss of phylogenetic and functional diversity.

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