• Form and function of island and mainland

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Fri Jul 14 22:30:26 2023
    Form and function of island and mainland plants

    Date:
    July 14, 2023
    Source:
    University of Go"ttingen
    Summary:
    Oceanic islands provide useful models for ecology, biogeography
    and evolutionary research. Many ground-breaking findings --
    including Darwin's theory of evolution -- have emerged from the
    study of species on islands and their interplay with their living
    and non-living environment.

    Now, an international research team has investigated the flora of
    the Canary Island of Tenerife. The results were surprising: the
    island's plant-life exhibits a remarkable diversity of forms. But
    the plants differ little from mainland plants in functional
    terms. However, unlike the flora of the mainland, the flora
    of Tenerife is dominated by slow- growing, woody shrubs with a
    'low-risk' life strategy.


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    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Oceanic islands provide useful models for ecology, biogeography and evolutionary research. Many ground-breaking findings -- including Darwin's theory of evolution -- have emerged from the study of species on islands
    and their interplay with their living and non-living environment. Now,
    an international research team led by the University of Go"ttingen has investigated the flora of the Canary Island of Tenerife. The results
    were surprising: the island's plant-life exhibits a remarkable diversity
    of forms.

    But the plants differ little from mainland plants in functional
    terms. However, unlike the flora of the mainland, the flora of Tenerife
    is dominated by slow- growing, woody shrubs with a "low-risk" life
    strategy. The results were published in Nature.

    The researchers investigated how the plants of Tenerife differ
    in functional terms from plants from other parts of the world. They
    conducted extensive field research and measurements at over 500 sites
    using the most up-to-date methods of functional ecology. The sites
    were scattered all over the island at altitudes ranging from sea level
    to mountainous regions above 3,300 metres. The scientists recorded
    about 80% of Tenerife's native seed plants, and surveyed eight plant characteristics: plant size, specific wood density, leaf thickness,
    absolute and specific leaf area, leaf dry matter, nitrogen concentration
    in leaf tissue, and seed weight. They compared their data with data on
    more than 2,000 plant species found on the mainland.

    "Our study shows, for the first time and contrary to all expectations,
    that species groups that evolved on the Canary Islands do not contribute
    to the expansion of the breadth of different traits. This means they do
    not lead to more functional diversity," explains the lead of the study, Professor Holger Kreft, and Go"ttingen University's Biodiversity,
    Macroecology and Biogeography research group. Previous comparisons
    show that species occurring on islands can differ significantly from
    their relatives on the mainland. A well-known example is provided by
    the Galapagos giant tortoise: the species is only found on the Galapagos Islands and, as a result of adaptation to its environmental conditions, is
    much larger than tortoises from the mainland. The research team expected similar differences between island and mainland plants, but this was
    not the case. "Rather, we see that most species follow the constraints
    of the island climate. Thus, medium-sized, woody species develop. These
    tend to live with the limited resources and high risks of extinction
    on the island. That is, they grow slowly. The high functional diversity
    is mainly due to the species that are widespread on the island and the
    nearby mainland," explains Kreft.

    "At the beginning of our research, we assumed that island plants would
    show fundamental differences and would be characterised by rather limited diversity in terms of function due to their geographical isolation,"
    explains first author Dr Paola Barajas Barbosa. The results are part of
    her doctoral thesis, which she did at the University of Go"ttingen. She
    now does research at the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity
    Research in Leipzig (iDiv). "We were all the more surprised to find that
    the plants of Tenerife have a comparatively high functional diversity."
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    Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Go"ttingen. Note:
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    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Martha Paola Barajas Barbosa, Dylan Craven, Patrick Weigelt, Pierre
    Denelle, Ru"diger Otto, Sandra Di'az, Jonathan Price, Jose'
    Mari'a Ferna'ndez-Palacios, Holger Kreft. Assembly of functional
    diversity in an oceanic island flora. Nature, 2023; DOI:
    10.1038/s41586-023-06305-z ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230714163216.htm

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