Map of the CI-2005 hotspots.
48 THE BIOGEOGRAPHY OF ISLAND LIFE
Fernández and Las Desventuradas islands,
grouped with the Chilean Winter
Rainfall–Valdivian Forests; Revillagigedo, Cocos
and Las Tres Marías islands, included in the
Mesoamerica hotspot; and the Macaronesian
islands, which form an intriguingly shaped
intrusion of the Mediterranean region into the
Atlantic ocean. Biogeographically, this final
example is not as peculiar as it might first seem
(e.g. Blondel and Aronson 1999), although the
islands—especially the Cape Verde islands—also
have African affinities (see text).
CI claim that the CI 2005 hotspots scheme
covers just 2.3% of the Earth’s surface, but
incorporates as endemics over 50% of the world’s
plant species, and 42% of terrestrial vertebrates.
The fashion in which the hotspots have been
delimited in both the 2000 and 2005 versions of
the scheme may be rather arbitrary, but long-
recognized biogeographical patterns are
nonetheless detectable in their map products,
which now serve to guide their conservation
investment strategy. The world’s islands not only
represent disproportionate amounts of diversity,
but they also account for a high proportion of
recorded global extinctions over the last few
hundred years, and a high proportion of globally
threatened species. A stress on islands is thus an
appropriate part of any global conservation
assessment based on the currency of species and
indeed is common to schemes promoted by all
the major international conservation NGOs at the
present time (e.g. the WWF, Conservation
International, BirdLife International).
Polynesia -
Micronesia
Polynesia-
Micronesia
Polynesia-
Micronesia
CaliforniaFloristic
Province
MadreanPine-Oak
Woodlands
MadreanPine-Oak
Woodlands
MesoamericaMesoamerica
CaribbeanIslandsCaribbeanIslands
Tumbes-Chocó-
Magdalena
Tumbes-Chocó-
Magdalena
Tropical Andes
ChileanWinter
ValdivianRainfall-
Forests
ChileanWinter
ValdivianRainfall-
Forests
Cerrado
Atlantic Forest
FloristicCape
Region
SucculentKaroo
Guinean Forests of West Africa
Maputaland-Pondoland-Albany
Madagascarand the
Indian OceanIslands
Madagascarand the
Indian Ocean Islands
ne
nat
mo
rfo
A
nre
ts
aE
Coastal Forests of Eastern Africa
Horn ofAfricaHorn of Africa
MediterraneanMediterraneanBasinBasin
CaucasusCaucasus
Irano-Anatolian HimalayaHimalaya
Mountains ofCentral AsiaMountains of Central Asia
Mountains ofSouthwest
China
Mountains of Southwest
China
Western Ghats
and Sri Lanka
WallaceaWallacea
SundalandSundaland
PhilippinesPhilippines
JapanJapan
NewCaledoniaNewCaledonia
New ZealandNew Zealand
EastMelanesian
Islands
EastMelanesian
Islands
SouthwestAustralia
NewNew ZealandZealand
Indo-BurmaIndo-Burma
HOTSPOTS
Wilderness Areas
Conservation International
February 2005
subfield of conservation biogeography(Whittaker
et al. 2005). We illustrate some of the issues for con-
servation biogeographers involved in assigning
island systems within faunal and floral regions by
considering the affinities of the Macaronesian
islands. Of course, in practice, political and eco-
nomic frameworks and affinities may be as or more
important in developing and realizing strategic
conservation planning, but here we lay these prag-
matic concerns to one side.
Not only do islands have many threatened
species today, but they have also contributed dis-
proportionately to species extinction in historic and
prehistoric times, such that in places much of the
underlying biogeographical structure may already
have been lost or distorted. This is problematic for