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The fate of terrestrial biodiversity during an oceanic island volcanic eruption

Authors :
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Cabildo Insular de La Palma
Gobierno de Canarias
Cabildo de Tenerife
Nogales, Manuel
Guerrero‑Campos, María
Boulesteix, Thomas
Taquet, Noémie
Beierkuhnlein, Carl
Campion, Robin
Fajardo, Silvia
Zurita, Nieves
Arechavaleta, Manuel
García, Rafael
Weiser, Frank
Medina, Félix M.
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Cabildo Insular de La Palma
Gobierno de Canarias
Cabildo de Tenerife
Nogales, Manuel
Guerrero‑Campos, María
Boulesteix, Thomas
Taquet, Noémie
Beierkuhnlein, Carl
Campion, Robin
Fajardo, Silvia
Zurita, Nieves
Arechavaleta, Manuel
García, Rafael
Weiser, Frank
Medina, Félix M.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Volcanic activity provides a unique opportunity to study the ecological responses of organisms to catastrophic environmental destruction as an essential driver of biodiversity change on islands. However, despite this great scientific interest, no study of the biodiversity at an erupting volcano has yet been undertaken. On La Palma (Canary archipelago), we quantified the main species affected and their fate during the 85-day eruption (September–December 2021). Our main objective consisted of monitoring the biodiversity subjected to critical stress during this volcanic eruption. We found that all biodiversity within a 2.5 km radius was severely affected after the first two weeks. It is challenging to assess whether volcanism can drive evolutionary traits of insular organisms. Examples are the adaptation of an endemic conifer to high temperatures, selection of functional plant types—secondary woodiness—, effects of the disappearance of invertebrates and their influence in trophic nets and vertebrate trophic plasticity. However, our data suggest that such previous evolutionary changes might continue to favour their resilience during this eruption. Lastly, it is a very good opportunity to assess the extent to which these periodic volcanic catastrophes may constitute temporary windows of repeated opportunities for the evolution and speciation of oceanic island biota.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1373158874
Document Type :
Electronic Resource