Author:
Keppel Gunnar,Morrison Clare,Meyer Jean-Yves,Boehmer Hans Juergen
Abstract
Islands in the tropical Pacific have a rich and unique biota produced by island biogeographic processes and modified
by recent anthropogenic influences. This biota has been shaped by four overlapping phases: natural colonization and
dynamics (phase 1), impacts of indigenous (phase 2) and non-indigenous (phase 3) settlers, and increasing environmental
awareness (phase 4). Island ecosystems are resilient to natural disturbance regimes but highly vulnerable to invasive
species and other human-related influences, due to comparatively low alpha diversity, isolated evolution and the absence
of certain functional groups. Habitat loss, overexploitation, invasive alien species and pollution continue to threaten
terrestrial biodiversity, compounded by limited environmental awareness, minimal conservation funding, project
mismanagement, limited local capacity and inadequate and/or unsuitable conservation policies. To achieve effective
conservation of terrestrial biodiversity in the region, biophysical threats need to be mitigated with improved scientific,
institutional and management capacity.
Subject
Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology
Cited by
53 articles.
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