A reappraisal of the role of humans in the biotic disturbance of islands
Fecha
2017Resumen
Traditionally, islands have been used as ecological
and biogeographical models because of their assumed
ecological simplicity, reduced ecosystem size and
isolation. The vast number of Earth’s oceanic islands
play a key role in maintaining global biodiversity and
serve as a rich source of evolutionary novelty. Research
into the factors determining diversity patterns on
islands must disentangle natural phenomena from
anthropogenic causes of habitat transformation,
interruption and enhancement of biological fluxes and
species losses and gains in these geographically and
ecologically limited environments. The anthropogenic
ecological forcing of communication through global
transport has profound implications regarding island–
continent links. Anthropogenic disturbances along
continental margins and insular coasts contribute to
shaping island biotas in ecological time, but also
have evolutionary consequences of global resonance.
Patterns of human landscape and resource use
(geographical space and ecological communities and
species), as well as increasing ecological connectivity of
oceanic islands and mainland, are chief driving forces
in island biogeography that should be reappraised.
Global indirect effects of human activities (i.e. climate
change) may also affect islands and interact with
these processes. We review the implications of direct
and indirect anthropogenic disturbances on island
biotic patterns, focusing on island size, isolation and
introduced exotic species, as well as the unsettled issue
of oceanic island ecological vulnerability.