Climate vs. topography – spatial patterns of plant species diversity and endemism on a high-elevation island
Fecha
2015Resumen
Climate and topography are among the most fundamental drivers of plant diversity. Here, we
assessed the importance of climate and topography in explaining diversity patterns of species richness,
endemic richness and endemicity on the landscape scale of an oceanic island and evaluated the
independent contribution of climatic and topographic variables to spatial diversity patterns.
2. We constructed a presence/absence matrix of perennial endemic and native vascular plant species
(including subspecies) in 890 plots on the environmentally very heterogeneous island of La Palma,
Canary Islands. Species richness, endemic richness and endemicity were recorded, interpolated and
related to climate (i.e. variables describing temperature, precipitation, variability and climatic rarity)
and topography (i.e. topographic complexity, solar radiation, geologic age, slope and aspect). We
used multimodel inference, spatial autoregressive models, variance partitioning and linear regression
kriging as statistical methods.
3. Species richness is best explained by both climatic and topographic variables. Topographic
variables (esp. topographic complexity and solar radiation) explain endemic richness, and climatic
variables (esp. elevation/temperature and rainfall seasonality) explain endemicity. Spatial patterns of
species richness, endemic richness and endemicity were in part geographically decoupled from each
other.
4. Synthesis. We identified several topography-dependent processes ranging from evolutionary processes
(micro-refugia, in situ speciation, pre-adaptation to rupicolous conditions, dispersal limitations)
to human-induced influences (introduced herbivores, fire, land use) that possibly shape the
endemic richness pattern of La Palma. In contrast, climate mainly drives endemicity, which is connected
to ecological speciation and specialization to local conditions. We highlight the importance
of incorporating climatic variability into future studies of plant species diversity and endemism. The
spatial incongruence in hot spots of species richness, endemic richness and endemicity emphasizes
the need for an integrated conservation approach acknowledging different diversity measures to protect
the complete spectrum of diversity. High-elevation islands such as La Palma are highly suitable
to study drivers of diversity and endemism, as they offer environmental gradients of continental
magnitude on the landscape scale of a single climatic mini-continent and a large array of in situspeciated
endemics.