4.5 Article

FloCan-A Revised Checklist for the Flora of the Canary Islands

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d13100480

Keywords

alien species; archipelago; biodiversity; databases; endemism; evolutionary arena; GBIF; invasive species; island biogeography; island biota; Macaronesia; macroecology; non-native alien species; plants; TRY; EU Biodiversity Strategy

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The flora of the Canary Islands has been studied for over 200 years, with a focus on biodiversity and the impact of drivers of change. Endemic plant species evolution plays a significant role in population decline and competitiveness. This work provides a comprehensive basis for biogeographical and macroecological studies, highlighting the increase in non-native species and the importance of standard international nomenclature integration.
The flora of the Canary Islands has been subject to botanical studies for more than 200 years. Several biodiversity databases are available for the archipelago. However, there are various drivers of change in real biodiversity and the knowledge about it constantly needs to be kept track of. Island floras are both: exposed to species loss and to species introductions, either through natural processes or by anthropogenic drivers. Additionally, the evolution of endemic plant species plays a substantial role. Endemic species are sensitive to population decline due to small population sizes and possible low competitiveness against incoming species. Additionally, there is continuous progress in systematics and taxonomy. Species names or their taxonomic attribution can be modified. Here, we check published plant lists for the Canary Islands and literature, and compile currently accepted taxa into an updated checklist. For this FloCan checklist, several sources were compiled, checked for completeness and quality, and their taxonomy was updated. We illustrate how far plant names are considered in regional or global databases. This work represents the current state of knowledge on Canary Island plant diversity, including introduced and recently described taxa. We provide a comprehensive and updated basis for biogeographical and macroecological studies. Particularly, the number of non-native species is being extended substantially. The adaptation to standard international nomenclature supports integration into large-scale studies.

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