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The pattern of declines and local extinctions of endemic inland Lepidium species in the eastern South Island.

Authors :
Walker, Susan
Harding, Michael A. C.
Loh, Graeme
Source :
New Zealand Journal of Ecology. 2023, Vol. 47 Issue 1, p1-13. 13p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Small patches of habitat for indigenous species that remain in developed landscapes are predicted to lose species over time as extinction debts are paid off and to become transformed by spillover from intensive land uses. In December 2020 we searched for plants of three inland South Island-endemic species of Lepidium (Brassicaceae; L. kirkii, L. sisymbrioides, and L. solandri) at previously known locations in Central Otago, the Waitaki Valley, the Mackenzie Basin, and Kura Tāwhiti (Castle Hill, North Canterbury). We recorded whether Lepidium populations remained and identified the vascular plant flora of each location. Lepidium kirkii was found at six of 14 locations where formerly known and at one new location, but numbered over 50 individuals at only one of these locations. Lepidium sisymbrioides was found at five of six locations visited, but we found fewer than four individuals at three of these locations. L. solandri was found at five of 12 formerly known locations in Central Otago (but numbered over 50 individuals at only one), at five of five formerly known locations on public land in the Mackenzie Basin, and at the one known location at Kura Tāwhiti. Exotic vascular plant species outnumbered native species at all but one Lepidium location in Central Otago and at Kura Tāwhiti, but not in the Mackenzie Basin, where there had been the least habitat loss and land-use intensification. Our results are consistent with theoretical predictions of more local plant extinctions at Lepidium locations, and greater transformation of their habitats, in landscapes dominated by intensive land uses and non-indigenous vegetation. We conclude that intensive ex situ and in situ management is now needed to avoid global extinctions of L. kirkii and L. sisymbrioides, and local extinctions of L. solandri at remaining Central Otago locations and at Kura Tāwhiti. We do not know whether landscape-scale processes still provide for the persistence of L. solandri and other dryland species in the Mackenzie Basin or whether intensive land use has already crossed ecological thresholds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01106465
Volume :
47
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
New Zealand Journal of Ecology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177542678
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.20417/nzjecol.47.3547