Species invasions and extinction: The future of native biodiversity on islands
Brown University · University of California, Santa Barbara
Abstract
Predation by exotic species has caused the extinction of many native animal species on islands, whereas competition from exotic plants has caused few native plant extinctions. Exotic plant addition to islands is highly nonrandom, with an almost perfect 1 to 1 match between the number of naturalized and native plant species on oceanic islands. Here, we evaluate several alternative implications of these findings. Does the consistency of increase in plant richness across islands imply that a saturation point in species richness has been reached? If not, should we expect total plant richness to continue to increase as new species are added? Finally, is the rarity of native plant extinctions to date a misleading…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 48.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Species richness
- Extinction (optical mineralogy)
- Introduced species
- Extinction debt
- Propagule
- Biodiversity
- Ecology
- Propagule pressure
- Life below water