Biogeography of the fauna of French Polynesia: diversification within and between a series of hot spot archipelagos

Author:

Gillespie Rosemary G1,Claridge Elin M2,Goodacre Sara L3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Science, University of California137 Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-3114, USA

2. UC Berkeley Gump Research StationBP 244, Maharepa, Moorea 98728, French Polynesia

3. Institute of Genetics, University of NottinghamNottingham NG7 2UH, UK

Abstract

The islands of French Polynesia cover an area the size of Europe, though total land area is smaller than Rhode Island. Each hot spot archipelago (Societies, Marquesas, Australs) is chronologically arranged. With the advent of molecular techniques, relatively precise estimations of timing and source of colonization have become feasible. We compile data for the region, first examining colonization (some lineages dispersed from the west, others from the east). Within archipelagos, blackflies ( Simulium ) provide the best example of adaptive radiation in the Societies, though a similar radiation occurs in weevils ( Rhyncogonus ). Both lineages indicate that Tahiti hosts the highest diversity. The more remote Marquesas show clear examples of adaptive radiation in birds, arthropods and snails. The Austral Islands, though generally depauperate, host astonishing diversity on the single island of Rapa, while lineages on other islands are generally widespread but with large genetic distances between islands. More recent human colonization has changed the face of Polynesian biogeography. Molecular markers highlight the rapidity of Polynesian human (plus commensal) migrations and the importance of admixture from other populations during the period of prehistoric human voyages. However, recent increase in traffic has brought many new, invasive species to the region, with the future of the indigenous biota uncertain.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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