Skip to main content Accessibility help

Login Alert

×

Menu links

  1. Browse
      1. Subjects
          1. Subjects (A-D)
            1. Anthropology
            2. Archaeology
            3. Area Studies
            4. Art
            5. Chemistry
            6. Classical Studies
            7. Computer Science
            8. Drama, Theatre, Performance Studies
          2. Subjects (E-K)
            1. Earth and Environmental Science
            2. Economics
            3. Education
            4. Engineering
            5. English Language Teaching – Resources for Teachers
            6. Film, Media, Mass Communication
            7. General Science
            8. Geography
            9. History
          3. Subjects (L-O)
            1. Language and Linguistics
            2. Law
            3. Life Sciences
            4. Literature
            5. Management
            6. Materials Science
            7. Mathematics
            8. Medicine
            9. Music
            10. Nutrition
          4. Subjects (P-Z)
            1. Philosophy
            2. Physics and Astronomy
            3. Politics and International Relations
            4. Psychiatry
            5. Psychology
            6. Religion
            7. Social Science Research Methods
            8. Sociology
            9. Statistics and Probability
        1. Open access
            1. All open access publishing
              1. Open access
              2. Open access journals
              3. Research open journals
              4. Journals containing open access
              5. Open access articles
              6. Open access books
              7. Open access Elements
          1. Journals
              1. Explore
                1. All journal subjects
                2. Search journals
              2. Open access
                1. Open access journals
                2. Research open journals
                3. Journals containing open access
                4. Open access articles
              3. Collections
                1. Cambridge Forum
                2. Cambridge Law Reports Collection
                3. Cambridge Prisms
                4. Research Directions
            1. Books
                1. Explore
                  1. Books
                  2. Open access books
                  3. New books
                  4. Flip it Open
                2. Collections
                  1. Cambridge Companions
                  2. Cambridge Editions
                  3. Cambridge Histories
                  4. Cambridge Library Collection
                  5. Cambridge Shakespeare
                  6. Cambridge Handbooks
                3. Collections (cont.)
                  1. Dispute Settlement Reports Online
                  2. Flip it Open
                  3. Hemingway Letters
                  4. Shakespeare Survey
                  5. Stahl Online
                  6. The Correspondence of Isaac Newton
              1. Elements
                  1. Explore
                    1. About Elements
                    2. Elements series
                    3. Open access Elements
                    4. New Elements
                  2. Subjects (A-E)
                    1. Anthropology
                    2. Archaeology
                    3. Classical Studies
                    4. Computer Science
                    5. Drama, Theatre, Performance Studies
                    6. Earth and Environmental Sciences
                    7. Economics
                    8. Education
                    9. Engineering
                  3. Subjects (F-O)
                    1. Film, Media, Mass Communication
                    2. History
                    3. Language and Linguistics
                    4. Law
                    5. Life Sciences
                    6. Literature
                    7. Management
                    8. Mathematics
                    9. Medicine
                    10. Music
                  4. Subjects (P-Z)
                    1. Philosophy
                    2. Physics and Astronomy
                    3. Politics and International Relations
                    4. Psychology
                    5. Religion
                    6. Sociology
                    7. Statistics and Probability
                1. Textbooks
                    1. Explore
                      1. Cambridge Higher Education
                      2. Title list
                      3. New titles
                  1. Collections
                      1. Book collections
                        1. Cambridge Companions
                        2. Cambridge Editions
                        3. Cambridge Histories
                        4. Cambridge Library Collection
                        5. Cambridge Shakespeare
                        6. Cambridge Handbooks
                      2. Book collections (cont.)
                        1. Dispute Settlement Reports Online
                        2. Flip it Open
                        3. Hemingway Letters
                        4. Shakespeare Survey
                        5. Stahl Online
                        6. The Correspondence of Isaac Newton
                      3. Journal collections
                        1. Cambridge Forum
                        2. Cambridge Law Reports Collection
                        3. Cambridge Materials
                        4. Cambridge Prisms
                      4. Series
                        1. All series
                    1. Partners
                        1. Partners
                          1. Agenda Publishing
                          2. Anthem Press
                          3. ARC Humanities Press
                          4. Boydell & Brewer
                          5. Bristol University Press
                          6. Central European University Press
                          7. Edinburgh University Press
                          8. Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research
                          9. Facet Publishing
                          10. Foundation Books
                        2. Partners (cont.)
                          1. Gerlach Press
                          2. Intersentia
                          3. ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute
                          4. Jagiellonian University Press
                          5. Manchester University Press
                          6. Multilingual Matters
                          7. Oxbow Books
                          8. Royal Economic Society
                          9. The University of Adelaide Press
                          10. Unisa Press
                        3. Partners (cont.)
                          1. Wits University Press
                    2. Services
                        1. About
                            1. About Cambridge Core
                              1. About
                              2. Accessibility statement
                              3. CrossMark policy
                              4. Ethical Standards
                            2. Environment and sustainability
                              1. Environment and sustainability
                              2. Reducing print
                              3. Journals moving to online only
                            3. Guides
                              1. User guides
                              2. User Guides and Videos
                              3. Support Videos
                              4. Training
                            4. Help
                              1. Cambridge Core help
                              2. Contact us
                              3. Technical support
                          1. Agents
                              1. Services for agents
                                1. Services for agents
                                2. Journals for agents
                                3. Books for agents
                                4. Price list
                            1. Authors
                                1. Journals
                                  1. Journal authors
                                  2. Journal publishing statistics
                                  3. Corresponding author
                                  4. Seeking permission to use copyrighted material
                                  5. Publishing supplementary material
                                  6. Preparing accessible materials
                                  7. Journal production - FAQs
                                2. Journals (cont.)
                                  1. Author affiliations
                                  2. Co-reviewing policy
                                  3. Anonymising your manuscript
                                  4. Publishing open access
                                  5. Convert your article to Gold Open Access
                                  6. Publishing Open Access - webinars
                                3. Journals (cont.)
                                  1. Preparing and submitting your paper
                                  2. Publication journey
                                  3. Publishing agreement FAQs for journal authors
                                  4. Author Information Form FAQs
                                  5. Promoting your published paper
                                  6. Measuring impact
                                  7. Journals artwork guide
                                  8. Using ORCID
                                4. Books
                                  1. Books
                                  2. Publishing an open access book
                                  3. Marketing your book
                                  4. Author guides for Cambridge Elements
                              1. Corporates
                                  1. Corporates
                                    1. Commercial reprints
                                    2. Advertising
                                    3. Sponsorship
                                    4. Book special sales
                                    5. Contact us
                                1. Editors
                                    1. Information
                                      1. Journal development
                                      2. Peer review for editors
                                      3. Open access for editors
                                      4. Policies and guidelines
                                    2. Resources
                                      1. The editor's role
                                      2. Open research for editors
                                      3. Engagement and promotion for editors
                                  1. Librarians
                                      1. Information
                                        1. Open Access for Librarians
                                        2. Transformative agreements
                                        3. Transformative Agreements - FAQs
                                        4. Evidence based acquisition
                                        5. Cambridge libraries of the world podcast
                                        6. Purchasing models
                                        7. Journals Publishing Updates
                                      2. Products
                                        1. Cambridge frontlist
                                        2. Cambridge journals digital archive
                                        3. Hot topics
                                        4. Other digital products
                                        5. Perpetual access products
                                        6. Price list
                                        7. Developing country programme
                                        8. New content
                                      3. Tools
                                        1. Eligibility checker
                                        2. Transformative agreements
                                        3. KBART
                                        4. MARC records
                                        5. Using MARCEdit for MARC records
                                        6. Inbound OpenURL specifications
                                        7. COUNTER usage reporting
                                      4. Resources
                                        1. Catalogues and resources
                                        2. Making the most of your EBA
                                        3. Posters
                                        4. Leaflets and brochures
                                        5. Additional resources
                                        6. Find my sales contact
                                        7. Training
                                        8. Read and publish resources
                                    1. Peer review
                                        1. Peer review
                                          1. How to peer review journal articles
                                          2. How to peer review book proposals
                                          3. How to peer review Registered Reports
                                          4. Peer review FAQs
                                          5. Ethics in peer review
                                          6. Online peer review systems
                                          7. A guide to Publons
                                      1. Publishing ethics
                                          1. Journals
                                            1. Publishing ethics guidelines for journals
                                            2. Core editorial policies for journals
                                            3. Authorship and contributorship for journals
                                            4. Affiliations for journals
                                            5. Research ethics for journals
                                            6. Competing interests and funding for journals
                                          2. Journals (cont.)
                                            1. Data and supporting evidence for journals
                                            2. Misconduct for journals
                                            3. Corrections, retractions and removals for journals
                                            4. Versions and adaptations for journals
                                            5. Libel, defamation and freedom of expression
                                            6. Business ethics journals
                                          3. Books
                                            1. Publishing ethics guidelines for books
                                            2. Core editorial policies for books
                                            3. Authorship and contributorship for books
                                            4. Affiliations for books
                                            5. Research ethics for books
                                            6. Competing interests and funding for books
                                          4. Books (cont.)
                                            1. Data and supporting evidence for books
                                            2. Misconduct for books
                                            3. Corrections, retractions and removals for books
                                            4. Versions and adaptations for books
                                            5. Libel, defamation and freedom of expression
                                            6. Business ethics books
                                        1. Publishing partners
                                            1. Publishing partners
                                              1. Publishing partnerships
                                              2. Book publishing partners
                                              3. eBook publishing partnerships
                                              4. Journal publishing partnerships
                                            2. Publishing partners (cont.)
                                              1. Journals publishing
                                              2. Customer support
                                              3. Membership Services
                                              4. Our Team
                                        2. Open research
                                            1. Open access policies
                                                1. Open access policies
                                                  1. Open research
                                                  2. Open access policies
                                                  3. Cambridge University Press and Plan S
                                                  4. Text and data mining
                                                  5. Preprint policy
                                                  6. Social sharing
                                                2. Journals
                                                  1. Open access journals
                                                  2. Gold Open Access journals
                                                  3. Transformative journals
                                                  4. Green Open Access policy for journals
                                                  5. Transparent pricing policy for journals
                                                3. Books and Elements
                                                  1. Open access books
                                                  2. Gold open access books
                                                  3. Green Open Access policy for books
                                                  4. Open access Elements
                                              1. Open access publishing
                                                  1. About open access
                                                    1. Open research
                                                    2. Open Access Week
                                                    3. What is open access?
                                                    4. Open access glossary
                                                    5. Open access myths
                                                    6. Hybrid Open Access FAQs
                                                    7. Eligibility checker
                                                  2. Open access resources
                                                    1. Open access resources
                                                    2. Benefits of open access
                                                    3. Creative commons licences
                                                    4. Funder policies and mandates
                                                    5. Article type definitions
                                                    6. Convert your article to Gold Open Access
                                                1. Open research initiatives
                                                    1. Research transparency
                                                      1. Transparency and openness
                                                      2. Open Practice Badges
                                                      3. OA organisations, initiatives & directories
                                                      4. Registered Reports
                                                      5. Annotation for Transparent Inquiry (ATI)
                                                    2. Journal flips
                                                      1. Open access journal flips
                                                      2. OA Journal Flip FAQs
                                                    3. Flip it Open
                                                      1. Flip it Open
                                                      2. Flip it Open FAQs
                                                  1. Open access funding
                                                      1. Open access funding
                                                        1. Funding open access publication
                                                        2. Cambridge Open Equity Initiative
                                                        3. Completing a RightsLink (open access) transaction
                                                    1. Cambridge Open Engage
                                                        1. Cambridge Open Engage
                                                          1. Cambridge Open Engage
                                                          2. Partner With Us
                                                          3. Branded Hubs
                                                          4. Event Workspaces
                                                          5. Partner Resources
                                                          6. APSA Preprints
                                                          7. APSA Preprints FAQs
                                                    Hostname: page-component-77f85d65b8-t6st2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-04-16T10:22:07.042Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

                                                    Island ecology and evolution: challenges in the Anthropocene

                                                    Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 June 2017


                                                    NATALIE R. GRAHAM*
                                                    Affiliation:
                                                    Department of Environmental Sciences Policy and Management, University of California Berkeley, Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
                                                    DANIEL S. GRUNER
                                                    Affiliation:
                                                    Department of Entomology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
                                                    JUN Y. LIM
                                                    Affiliation:
                                                    Department of Environmental Sciences Policy and Management, University of California Berkeley, Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Valley Life Sciences Building, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
                                                    ROSEMARY G. GILLESPIE
                                                    Affiliation:
                                                    Department of Environmental Sciences Policy and Management, University of California Berkeley, Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
                                                    *
                                                    *Correspondence: Natalie R. Graham email: n.graham@berkeley.edu

                                                    Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

                                                    Summary

                                                    Islands are widely considered to be model systems for studying fundamental questions in ecology and evolutionary biology. The fundamental state factors that vary among island systems – geologic history, size, isolation and age – form the basis of mature phenomenological and predictive theory. In this review, we first highlight classic lines of inquiry that exemplify the historical and continuing importance of islands. We then show how the conceptual power of islands as ‘natural laboratories’ can be improved through functional classifications of both the biological properties of, and human impact on, insular systems. We highlight how global environmental change has been accentuated on islands, expressly because of their unique insular properties. We review five categories of environmental perturbation: climate change, habitat modification, direct exploitation, invasion and disease. Using an analysis of taxonomic checklists for the arthropod biotas of three well-studied island archipelagos, we show how taxonomists are meeting the challenge of biodiversity assessment before the biodiversity disappears. Our aim is to promote discussion on the tight correlations of the environmental health of insular systems to their continued importance as singular venues for discovery in ecology and evolutionary biology, as well as to their conservation significance as hotspots of endemism.


                                                    Information

                                                    Type
                                                    Subject Reviews
                                                    Copyright
                                                    Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 2017 

                                                    VALUE OF ISLANDS FOR INSIGHTS INTO ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY

                                                    Islands are widely considered to be model systems for studying fundamental questions in ecology and evolutionary biology (MacArthur & Wilson Reference MacArthur and Wilson1967; Vitousek Reference Vitousek2004; Grant & Grant Reference Grant and Grant2011). The study of islands has inspired a multitude of core theories in ecology and evolutionary biology (Warren et al. Reference Warren, Simberloff, Ricklefs, Aguilée, Condamine, Gravel, Morlon, Mouquet, Rosindell, Casquet, Conti, Cornuault, Fernández-Palacios, Hengl, Norder, Rijsdijk, Sanmartín, Strasberg, Triantis, Valente, Whittaker, Gillespie, Emerson and Thébaud2015). Arguably the most pivotal is that of Darwin who, through observation of tanagers on the Galápagos, famously theorized the role of natural selection and specialization to different diets to account for the observed diversity in beak morphology (Darwin Reference Darwin1859).

                                                    Islands have also played a role in the birth of historical biogeography. Wallace (Reference Wallace1880), through his extensive fieldwork in the Indo-Pacific, discovered and characterized faunal affinities along distinct western (Asian origin) and eastern (Australian origin) lines, providing enduring insight into the role of historical and geological factors in driving species distributions (Holt et al. Reference Holt, Lessard, Borregaard, Fritz, Araújo, Dimitrov, Fabre, Graham, Graves and Jønsson2013). Likewise, islands have provided insights into the biogeographical imprint of extremely distant events in the Earth's history, connected with the plate-tectonic processes that have seen the break-up of super-continents, as well as the relative role of vicariance and dispersal in colonization history (Rosen Reference Rosen1975).

                                                    Islands have also played an instrumental role in the development of several fundamental theories in ecology. They are a key element in one of the most robust generalizations in ecology – the species–area relationship (Arrhenius Reference Arrhenius1921; Preston Reference Preston1960) – which has been used extensively to predict the magnitude of species extinction from habitat loss (e.g. Thomas et al. Reference Thomas, Cameron, Green, Bakkenes, Beaumont, Collingham, Erasmus, De Siqueira, Grainger and Hannah2004). MacArthur and Wilson's equilibrium theory of island biogeography (MacArthur & Wilson Reference MacArthur and Wilson1967) suggested that the species–area relationship manifested from a dynamic equilibrium between immigration and extinction, and that this dynamic was in turn influenced by the effect of isolation and island area on immigration and extinction rates. Diamond (Reference Diamond, Diamond and Cody1975) also used islands to argue that competitive interactions between species could explain non-random patterns of species co-occurrence in communities, arguing for the importance of biotic interactions in shaping local community structures. Associated rules of ‘forbidden species combinations’ and ‘reduced niche overlap’ have sparked more recent debate regarding the formation of appropriate null models (Gotelli & McCabe Reference Gotelli and McCabe2002; Chase & Myers Reference Chase and Myers2011). Likewise, the concept of community nestedness in which the species composition of small assemblages is a subset of larger assemblages drew upon data from islands (Darlington Reference Darlington1957).

                                                    Islands have also been important in the development of insights at the interface between ecology and evolution. Thus, the idea of the ‘taxon cycle’ (Wilson Reference Wilson1961), developed with studies of undisturbed island ant faunas in the Moluccas–Melanesian arc, argued that predictable ecological and evolutionary changes proceeded through iterative range expansion and colonization followed by evolutionary specialization within island populations. Ultimately, taxa either went extinct or progressed through a new phase of range expansion, thus renewing the cycle (Wilson Reference Wilson1961). Thus, over the last century, ecological and evolutionary research focusing on multiple facets of islands – from the colonization of species and the development of uniquely evolved biotas, to the predictability of ecosystem development and community assembly over space and time – has shaped our fundamental vision of both pattern and process in ecology and evolutionary biology.

                                                    Considering the centrality of islands to fundamental development of these disciplines, we ask: what are the properties of insular systems that make them exceptional, and how are these hallmarks at risk in the Anthropocene? In the following sections, our objectives are threefold: (1) to consider the biological properties of insular systems in order to show how an island-based conceptual framework is usefully applied to situational derivatives of ‘true islands’ formed de novo (e.g. oceanic islands, caves and salt lakes) or by fragmentation (e.g. sky islands and kīpuka); (2) to review how predictions from theory and extensive empirical study can provide solutions to anthropogenic problems facing all island systems; and (3) to summarize a few important consequences of anthropogenic change on islands, but also to highlight where scientific inquiry, at the most fundamental level of exploration of alpha-diversity, is providing a way to catalogue the changing world. Our review of human impacts is necessarily superficial, designed to categorize rather than provide a comprehensive overview. Moreover, specific examples are drawn primarily from the literature on oceanic islands, with which we are most familiar. Our intention is to stimulate broad discourse on the value of, and future challenges to, island environments that have generated so many seminal insights in the fields of ecology and evolution.

                                                    BIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF INSULAR SYSTEMS

                                                    Island characteristics

                                                    From a biological perspective, an insular habitat can be defined as any discrete habitat that is isolated from other similar habitats by a surrounding inhospitable matrix (Gillespie & Clague Reference Gillespie and Clague2009). Both the habitat and the isolating matrix are relative to the organism in question. Water bodies present a stark barrier for terrestrial lineages on islands; in the same way, intervening land around water bodies creates a barrier for aquatic organisms (Gillespie & Roderick Reference Gillespie and Roderick2002). Patches of habitat (e.g. characterized by vegetation, soil and/or microclimate) separated by areas of unsuitable terrain are also essentially isolated for species of narrow environmental tolerance. Islands may thus include sky islands, whale falls in the ocean, lakes within a land mass and forest fragments in a matrix of secondary growth, pasture lands or anthropogenic development. Because a greater understanding of the spectrum of island attributes will allow us to compare and contrast the processes playing out on them, we next review four primary attributes that dictate the biological properties of any given insular system: formation history, time, area, and isolation.

                                                    Formation history

                                                    It was the view of Darwin (Reference Darwin1859) that biota on de novo islands were a product of colonization from continents followed by in situ evolutionary change. In contrast, Wallace (Reference Wallace1880) studied islands in Indonesia, which were fragments of continents, and so his ideas revolved around the faunal affinities of islands relative to their source pools. Insular systems that are formed de novo can only gain species initially by colonization, and the biota grows through colonization or speciation (Warren et al. Reference Warren, Simberloff, Ricklefs, Aguilée, Condamine, Gravel, Morlon, Mouquet, Rosindell, Casquet, Conti, Cornuault, Fernández-Palacios, Hengl, Norder, Rijsdijk, Sanmartín, Strasberg, Triantis, Valente, Whittaker, Gillespie, Emerson and Thébaud2015). Thus, it is an island's degree of isolation that dictates how much subsequent species accumulation will be a consequence of in situ diversification (neo-endemics) (MacArthur & Wilson Reference MacArthur and Wilson1967; Lomolino Reference Lomolino2000; Rosindell & Phillimore Reference Rosindell and Phillimore2011). In contrast, insular fragments created by submergence or changes in climate of surrounding areas are formed with a full biotic complement, and lose species during their formation through relaxation (Wilcox Reference Wilcox1978; Terborgh et al. Reference Terborgh, Lopez, Nunez, Rao, Shahabuddin, Orihuela, Riveros, Ascanio, Adler and Lambert2001). Given a long period of time on fragment islands, distinct species may form (paleo-endemics). Thus, the history of island formation is key to the biological characteristics of a given insular community (Fig. 1).

                                                    Figure 1 Evolutionary assembly of de novo and fragment islands at varying levels of time and isolation. Differently shaded shapes represent species as they accumulate through colonization and through the formation of new species by both processes of anagenesis and cladogenesis. Black arrows indicate whether species are primarily accumulated by colonization (incoming arrow) or genetic divergence (arching arrow). (a) Fragment islands begin with biota similar to source. The number of species will decrease over ecological time as a result of relaxation and simply because of reduced area. Over evolutionary time, species diverge from original stock through anagenesis (unfilled circles), with the formation of paleo-endemics. (b) De novo islands are formed without life, thus the ecological space is open and available when they first appear. Over time, species increase through both colonization and the formation of new species by cladogenesis (triangles). At high isolation, multiple neo-endemics may form through adaptive radiation.

                                                    Time

                                                    In general, older islands have more species when the effects of formation history, area and latitude are removed (Wilcox Reference Wilcox1978). Time can make up for isolation by allowing for more time for immigration and/or speciation on de novo islands (Willis Reference Willis1922; Borges & Brown Reference Borges and Brown1999; Gruner Reference Gruner2007). On fragment islands, the primary effect of time is greater paleo-endemism (Gillespie & Roderick Reference Gillespie and Roderick2002).

                                                    Area

                                                    Species richness has long been recognized to scale as a log-linear function of area (Arrhenius Reference Arrhenius1921; Rosenzweig Reference Rosenzweig1995). One of MacArthur and Wilson's (Reference MacArthur and Wilson1967) key insights was that larger areas have the potential to support larger populations of species, thereby reducing extinction rates from demographic stochasticity and thus leading to greater species richness. Larger populations also lead to greater standing genetic diversity, which may enhance rates of evolutionary change (Frankham Reference Frankham1996). Area is also broadly correlated with other aspects of the landscape that promote speciation, including habitat diversity and heterogeneity and the potential for allopatric barriers (Losos & Parent Reference Losos, Parent, Losos and Ricklefs2009).

                                                    Isolation

                                                    De novo islands close to a source of migrants are expected to reach an equilibrium species diversity with continuous turnover (MacArthur & Wilson Reference MacArthur and Wilson1967). Increasing isolation leads to speciation playing a larger role in species accumulation, with anagenesis giving way to cladogenesis (Rosindell & Phillimore Reference Rosindell and Phillimore2011) and adaptive radiation on the most remote islands (Gillespie & Roderick Reference Gillespie and Roderick2002). Fragment islands are generally less isolated than oceanic islands. However, those that are very isolated for extended periods can also serve as a background for adaptive radiation, presumably facilitated by fluctuations in land area and climate opening ecological opportunities for new colonists (Yoder et al. Reference Yoder, Campbell, Blanco, dos Reis, Ganzhorn, Goodman, Hunnicutt, Larsen, Kappeler and Rasoloarison2016).

                                                    Island dynamics

                                                    The formation history, time, area and isolation are not static. Geologic and climatic processes are dynamic: islands are formed, and area and isolation may change over time through cycles of fusion and fission of land masses (Price & Elliott-Fisk Reference Price and Elliott-Fisk2004). The relative temporal scales of these processes will determine the interplay of area and isolation, which in turn will influence the biological properties of insular environments (Gillespie et al. Reference Gillespie, Rominger, Lim, Scheiner and Mindell2017). For example, the relative abundance of different habitats on geologically ancient islands such as Madagascar has varied through time due to climatic oscillations, giving rise to a biota with both paleo-endemic and neo-endemic elements (Yoder et al. Reference Yoder, Campbell, Blanco, dos Reis, Ganzhorn, Goodman, Hunnicutt, Larsen, Kappeler and Rasoloarison2016).

                                                    Over shorter timescales, the geologic life cycle of oceanic ‘hotspot’ islands, from subaerial emergence to their eventual erosional demise, strongly affect the tempo of evolutionary radiation and decline on islands (Borregaard et al. Reference Borregaard, Amorim, Borges, Cabral, Fernández-Palacios, Field, Heaney, Kreft, Matthews, Olesen, Price, Rigal, Steinbauer, Triantis, Valente, Weigelt and Whittaker2017). The sequential formation of the Hawaiian archipelago has played host to multiple rapid species radiations that slowed with increasing age and declining island area (Lim & Marshall Reference Lim and Marshall2017). In hotspot archipelagos with defined geological ‘life cycles’ (Whittaker et al. Reference Whittaker, Triantis and Ladle2008; Lim & Marshall Reference Lim and Marshall2017), there tends to be a progression of lineages colonizing from older to younger islands (Wagner & Funk Reference Wagner and Funk1995; Shaw & Gillespie Reference Shaw and Gillespie2016), and the composition of the biota shifts over geological time from primarily colonizing species on the youngest islands to those dominated by endemic species arising in situ (Rominger et al. Reference Rominger, Goodman, Lim, Armstrong, Becking, Bennett, Brewer, Cotoras, Ewing, Harte, Martinez, O'Grady, Percy, Price, Roderick, Shaw, Valdovinos, Gruner and Gillespie2016). This sequential formation within an archipelago serves as a chronosequence; each island can be conceptualized as a trial in an experiment, with each new island a younger replicate of one of these experiments (Simon Reference Simon1987; Gillespie Reference Gillespie2016).

                                                    On yet shorter timescales, climate cycles play a role as ‘species pumps’, driving repeated changes in habitat isolation and thus promoting diversification. For example, changes in sea level have repeatedly isolated and reconnected the islands of the Galápagos, which may have enhanced species diversity (Grant & Grant Reference Grant and Grant2016). Alternating periods of warming and cooling have resulted in iterated episodes of isolation facilitating differentiation and endemism in Caribbean crickets (Papadopoulou & Knowles Reference Papadopoulou and Knowles2015). Other drivers of fusion and fission cycles, such as lava flows that periodically isolate forest patches (‘kīpuka’) on a geological landscape mosaic, may act as ‘crucibles’ for evolution (Carson et al. Reference Carson, Lockwood and Craddock1990).

                                                    Ecological assembly

                                                    The equilibrium theory of island biogeography (ETIB) (MacArthur & Wilson Reference MacArthur and Wilson1967) proposed that species richness on an island is a balance between immigration, which decreases with increasing distance from a mainland source, and extinction, which decreases with increasing island size. Subsequent work demonstrated how isolation affects extinction (in addition to immigration) through the ‘rescue effect’ (Brown & Kodric-Brown Reference Brown and Kodric-Brown1977). The ETIB, though developed for de novo oceanic islands, has been applied to diverse insular systems, most notably to examine the conservation implications of fragmentation on species diversity (Triantis & Bhagwat Reference Triantis, Bhagwat, Ladle and Whittaker2011). In addition, the ETIB fortified concepts of meta-populations, in which the colonization–extinction dynamics of a population of populations are modelled in ecological time (Levins Reference Levins1969), and these concepts were later extended for communities (Leibold et al. Reference Leibold, Holyoak, Mouquet, Amarasekare, Chase, Hoopes, Holt, Shurin, Law and Tilman2004).

                                                    The main aspect of the ETIB used for conservation comes out of the ‘single large or several small’ debate (Simberloff & Abele Reference Simberloff and Abele1976). Because larger and less isolated areas support more species, emphasis is placed on mitigating the effects of habitat fragmentation to allow habitats to be as large and as contiguous as possible (Whittaker et al. Reference Whittaker, Araújo, Jepson, Ladle, Watson and Willis2005). While there is a tremendous body of research that supports these overall premises (Warren et al. Reference Warren, Simberloff, Ricklefs, Aguilée, Condamine, Gravel, Morlon, Mouquet, Rosindell, Casquet, Conti, Cornuault, Fernández-Palacios, Hengl, Norder, Rijsdijk, Sanmartín, Strasberg, Triantis, Valente, Whittaker, Gillespie, Emerson and Thébaud2015), there are two key elements in the ETIB that are still debated, namely equilibrium (Harmon et al. Reference Harmon, Harrison and Price2015) and turnover (Shaw & Gillespie Reference Shaw and Gillespie2016). For example, it has been argued that communities are rarely at equilibrium, either because there has not been sufficient time to reach an equilibrium state or because the rate of temporal change to habitats or islands outpaces that of biological processes (Chambers et al. Reference Chambers, Negron-Juarez, Marra, Di Vittorio, Tews, Roberts, Ribeiro, Trumbore and Higuchi2013). Moreover, the idea of continual species turnover contrasts strikingly with the phenomenon of priority effects, in which an early colonizing species in an area has an advantage over subsequent colonizers (Fukami Reference Fukami2015) and can lead to patterns of endemism over evolutionary timescales (Shaw & Gillespie Reference Shaw and Gillespie2016). Understanding the transition between ecological and evolutionary processes is a promising new avenue for research using island chronosequences, which allow the study of communities over ecological and evolutionary time (Rominger et al. Reference Rominger, Goodman, Lim, Armstrong, Becking, Bennett, Brewer, Cotoras, Ewing, Harte, Martinez, O'Grady, Percy, Price, Roderick, Shaw, Valdovinos, Gruner and Gillespie2016).

                                                    Both concepts of turnover and equilibrium have key relevance to conservation. For instance, given the time required for evolution, the interplay between colonization and speciation will necessarily be modified through disturbance, whether geological or ecological, natural or anthropogenic. Disturbances may effectively ‘reset’ a community to a more simple species composition, opening it to colonization by available propagules, with the time required to reach an equilibrium depending on propagule availability. On isolated islands, native communities are largely the product of within-archipelago colonization and, associated with the paucity of colonizers, speciation. With the advent of humans and associated commensals, the availability of propagules has greatly increased. Thus, based on the arguments above, the impact of the increased extra-archipelago propagule pressure will depend on local disturbance, ecological turnover and biotic resistance (Florencio et al. Reference Florencio, Rigal, Borges, Cardoso, Santos and Lobo2016).

                                                    Ecosystem function

                                                    Ecologists have long debated the relationship between diversity and the functioning of ecosystems (Hooper et al. Reference Hooper, Chapin, Ewel, Hector, Inchausti, Lavorel, Lawton, Lodge, Loreau and Naeem2005). At one level, species have been thought to make singular, unique contributions to the ecosystems. A famous analogy likened species to the rivets in a plane, their combined loss eventually causing the entire structure to fall apart (Ehrlich & Ehrlich Reference Ehrlich and Ehrlich1981). Alternatively, species have been viewed as redundant in a system, with multiple species performing similar functional roles and so systems are resilient to some loss of species (Walker Reference Walker1992). Others have said that the role of specific species in a community is context dependent, and the effect following their removal is individualist or unpredictable (Lawton Reference Lawton1994). Thus, effects of disturbance and species loss or gain may be more easily studied on islands, and understanding of the factors leading to increased vulnerability across island systems is invaluable.

                                                    HUMAN IMPACT ON INSULAR SYSTEMS

                                                    The need for local understanding of how the biodiversity and the associated environment have been impacted by anthropogenic introductions (Kueffer et al. Reference Kueffer, Daehler, Torres-Santana, Lavergne, Meyer, Otto and Silva2010), and what trajectories they will follow given current and future extinctions and climate change (Kueffer et al. Reference Kueffer, Drake and Fernández-Palacios2014), are particularly critical on islands. Islands often have limited biological and human resources, are isolated and are exposed to storms and sea level rise, and therefore have limited resilience to new perturbations. Further, island economies that rely on the quality of their natural environment, notably through tourism, fishing and subsistence farming, are deeply affected by degradation of their environment (Connell Reference Connell2013). Some islands, including Great Britain and many Mediterranean islands, have had a long history of human influence, such that it is difficult to discern natural from anthropogenic influences. In contrast, the impacts of humans have generally been more recent on remote island systems. Here, paleontological studies have helped discern where natural processes or human impacts, whether direct or indirect, have triggered prehistoric turnover in dominant vegetation types (Burney et al. Reference Burney, James, Burney, Olson, Kikuchi, Wagner, Burney, McCloskey, Kikuchi, Grady, Gage and Nishek2001; Crowley et al. Reference Crowley, Godfrey, Bankoff, Perry, Culleton, Kennett, Sutherland, Samonds and Burney2017). Reasons for high extinction rates include the vulnerability of narrowly endemic species associated with their smaller population sizes, combined with their evolutionary isolation. Body size appears also to influence vulnerability to extinction, with larger species being more extinction-prone (Terzopoulou et al. Reference Terzopoulou, Rigal, Whittaker, Borges and Triantis2015). The introduction of new species and other forms of disturbance, including climate change, which weaken ecological and spatial barriers, may lead to hybridization as opposed to extinction, particularly among certain lineages of plant species, given that strong post-zygotic isolating barriers are poorly developed in island plants (Crawford & Archibald Reference Crawford and Archibald2017). These extinction factors, combined with global change phenomenon, have led to the loss of many island endemic lineages. For example, up to 2000 species of birds, mostly flightless rails, were lost following human colonization in Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia (Steadman Reference Steadman1995). Likewise, achatinellid tree snails in the Pacific Islands, with estimated densities of up to 500 per tree in 1903 in the Hawaiian lowlands, have largely disappeared in the last 100 years (Hadfield et al. Reference Hadfield, Miller and Anne1993). However, the overall accumulation of extirpated species might be mediated by the taxonomic disharmony on isolated islands, where introduced species are more likely to play unique or under-represented functional roles than on the mainland (Cushman Reference Cushman, Vitousek, Loope and Adsersen1995).

                                                    Human impacts on island systems can be grouped into five categories, recognizing these categories are neither independent nor comprehensive: climate change, habitat modification, direct exploitation, invasion and disease. The relative importance of these varies across islands, and many island systems face multiple anthropogenic pressures simultaneously and synergistically (Fig. 2).

                                                    Figure 2 Examples of major threats to island ecosystems, with illustrations from the Hawaiian Islands and Micronesia. (a) Urban development. Aerial photo of Honolulu, showing the entirely modified urban environment of Waikiki. The initial wetlands were first modified in the mid-15th century to cultivate wetland taro and for fishponds, then they were drained in the 1920s with construction of the Ala Wai Canal to mitigate mosquito-borne human disease with further urbanization. Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (b) Crops. Pineapples, with sugar, were major plantation crops in Hawaiʻi starting in the mid-1800s (Perroy et al. Reference Perroy, Melrose and Cares2016). Acreage in pineapple and sugar halved between 1980 and 2015 and Maui Land and Pineapple Company (shown here) closed in 2009. Currently, many plantations lie idle and weed ridden, with an uncertain future. Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (c) Pasture. Cattle were introduced into the Hawaiian Islands in the 1790s, and ranching started in the early-to-mid-1800s, and patches of native forest became increasingly restricted to inaccessible gulches, as shown in this photo of Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge. Recent efforts are restoring areas of degraded pasture and forest, such as those at Auwahi on Maui (Cabin Reference Cabin2013). Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (d) Climate change. The many atolls that make up Micronesia now suffer frequent inundation as a result of sea level rise, as illustrated in this photo of Majuro in the Marshall Islands, which has become a vocal participant in global climate change discussions (Labriola Reference Labriola2016). Many low-lying island nations of the Pacific are buying tracts of land on higher islands (Green Reference Green2016). Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (e) Invasions. One of the most insidious invaders of native ecosystems in the Hawaiian Islands is kahili ginger, Hedychium gardnerianum (The Nature Conservancy of Hawaii 2011), as shown: the left side shows a monotypic stand of ginger, the right a relatively pristine forest. The fence in front of the ginger, marking the boundary of the Waikamoi Preserve, in no way inhibits the spread, which is controlled to the extent possible by the diligence of The Nature Conservancy of Hawaii employees. Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (f) Disease. Studies, such as that which is shown here at Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge, show that native honeycreepers such as the ʻapapane are vulnerable to pox and malaria (LaPointe Reference LaPointe2008) and might be affected by upslope expansion of avian diseases (Camp et al. Reference Camp, Pratt, Gorresen, Jeffrey and Woodworth2010). Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (g) Direct exploitation. In the Hawaiian Islands, the strongest evidence of direct exploitation is the use of native bird feathers in capes. Perhaps most dramatic was the ‘Oʻo, which was common in the 1800s, but was extinct by the mid-1900s, and was exploited for a small tuft of yellow shoulder feathers (Lovette Reference Lovette2008). Photo credit: Honolulu Museum of Art.

                                                    Climate change

                                                    The human inhabitants of oceanic islands are already dealing with the reality of climate change, as is particularly reflected in rising sea levels (Shenk Reference Shenk2011). Governments of smaller islands have already purchased land on larger islands as a final effort for human survival (Caramel Reference Caramel2014). In terms of direct effects of climate, mean annual temperatures are expected to rise on oceanic islands despite buffering effects from surrounding oceans; in addition, slightly greater annual precipitation is predicted for the majority of islands in the future, with an increasing trend towards the end of the century, although large-scale precipitation projections might disregard the influence of island topography on precipitation patterns at smaller scales (Harter et al. Reference Harter, Irl, Seo, Steinbauer, Gillespie, Triantis, Fernández Palacios and Beierkuhnlein2015). Likewise, the projected increase in intensity of extreme weather events (e.g. droughts, storm surges and hurricanes) has the potential for greater damage in delicate island habitats (Seneviratne et al. Reference Seneviratne, Nicholls, Easterling, Goodess, Kanae, Kossin, Luo, Marengo, McInnes, Rahimi, Field, Barros, Stocker, Qin, Dokken, Ebi, Mastrandrea, Mach, Plattner, Allen, Tignor and Midgley2012; Nurse et al. Reference Nurse, McLean, Agard, Briguglio, Duvat-Magnan, Pelesikoti, Tompkins, Webb, Barros, Field, Dokken, Mastrandrea, Mach, Bilir, Chatterjee, Ebi, Estrada, Genova, Girma, Kissel, Levy, MacCracken, Mastrandrea and White2014).

                                                    Habitat modification

                                                    The modification of habitats for human habitation, agriculture, livestock and other resource extraction is a major global conservation concern that is not limited to islands (Foley et al. Reference Foley, DeFries, Asner, Barford, Bonan, Carpenter, Chapin, Coe, Daily and Gibbs2005). However, the insular nature and smaller geographic size of islands can lead to two distinct consequences. First, the biota are more vulnerable to reductions in habitat for simple demographic reasons, as population sizes are usually small, coupled with the higher uniqueness – or endemism – of the biota. Second, islands that are independent nations often have a very limited economic base; thus, of the 48 countries on the UN's list of Least Developed Countries, nine are islands (five in the Pacific and four in the Indian Ocean). Poverty itself places tremendous demands on resources, leading to further exploitation and habitat modification.

                                                    Direct exploitation

                                                    Linked to habitat modification, direct exploitation of natural resources has had a major historical impact on island species, perhaps most notably flightless birds (Steadman Reference Steadman1995). In the Pacific, ancestors of the Polynesians spread across most island groups in Oceania, clearing forests, cultivating crops, raising domesticated animals and hunting megafauna to extinction (Steadman & Martin Reference Steadman and Martin2003). Currently, direct exploitation is most apparent on economically poorer islands, such as Madagascar (Golden et al. Reference Golden, Bonds, Brashares, Rasolofoniaina and Kremen2014), where there are substantial pressures on the natural resources on which people depend for day-to-day survival (Connell Reference Connell2013).

                                                    Invasion

                                                    On oceanic islands, more extinctions have been attributed to introduced species than to habitat loss alone (Brooks et al. Reference Brooks, Mittermeier, Mittermeier, Da Fonseca, Rylands, Konstant, Flick, Pilgrim, Oldfield, Magin and Hilton-Taylor2002). Humans have eroded biogeographical barriers by mediating dispersal of species into new regions where they can naturalize and cause ecological damage. A global database of 481 mainland and 362 island regions shows that, in total, 13 138 plant species (3.9% of extant global vascular flora) have become naturalized somewhere on the globe as a result of human activity (van Kleunen et al. Reference van Kleunen, Dawson and Maurel2015), with the Pacific Islands showing the fastest increase in species numbers with respect to land area. Although the relative vulnerability of continents and islands to biotic invasions has long been debated (Elton Reference Elton1958), it is generally held that the severity of invasive species impacts has been greater in isolated insular systems (D'Antonio & Dudley Reference D'Antonio, Dudley, Vitousek, Loope and Adsersen1995).

                                                    The impact of invasive species can become more profound due to their ability to modify the environment (so-called ‘ecosystem engineers’), which can lead to facilitation with other non-natives (Borges et al. Reference Borges, Lobo, Azevedo, Gaspar, Melo and Nunes2006). In plants, characteristics such as prolific seed production, dispersal ability, shade tolerance, nitrogen fixation and the production of allelopathic compounds can cause dramatic ecosystem-level effects. For example, the Macaronesian nitrogen-fixing tree Morella faya appears to facilitate subsequent invasions by enhancing nitrogen availability in nutrient-poor soils (Vitousek et al. Reference Vitousek, Walker, Whiteaker, Mueller-Dombois and Matson1987). Such facilitation demonstrates the potential for ‘invasional meltdown’ (Simberloff & Von Holle Reference Simberloff and Von Holle1999), with synergistic impacts being greater than with either species alone. Likewise, endangerment and extinction of native species may precipitate co-extinctions of mutualists (Cox & Elmqvist Reference Cox and Elmqvist2000).

                                                    Disease

                                                    Introduction of non-native species (including humans) to islands has frequently been accompanied by diseases that find targets in naïve species and cause rapid extinction events. Among indigenous peoples, catastrophic declines in population sizes associated with the arrival of mainland human populations in the 1800s are well known in islands ranging from the offshore Scottish islets of St Kilda (Keay & Keay Reference Keay and Keay1994) to the remote islands of the Pacific (Kunitz Reference Kunitz1996), and are generally attributed to the effects of disease as a function of the susceptibility of the population. Native species have suffered similar impacts. Thus, in the Marquesas Islands, the endemic genus of Pomarea flycatchers appear to have succumbed to malaria, while the more recently arriving Marquesan reed warblers may be resistant (Gillespie et al. Reference Gillespie, Claridge and Goodacre2008). In Hawaiʻi, avian malaria has been linked to the decline or extinction of 60 endemic forest bird species (Sodhi et al. Reference Sodhi, Brook, Bradshaw, Levin, Carpenter, Godfray, Kinzig, Loreau, Losos, Walker and Wilcove2009).

                                                    The impacts of disease are closely tied with other anthropogenic effects such as non-native species and climate change. Thus, avian malaria and avian pox, which have been important agents in the extinction of many endemic island birds and have also caused substantial population change and range contraction (Ralph & Fancy Reference Ralph and Fancy1994), rely on the introduced mosquito vector Culex quinquefasciatus for transmission. Likewise, global warming is expected to increase the occurrence, distribution and intensity of avian malaria and to threaten high-elevation refugia (LaPointe et al. Reference LaPointe, Atkinson and Samuel2012).

                                                    UNDERSTANDING AND ADDRESSING CONSERVATION CHALLENGES

                                                    It is clear that islands vary widely in biophysical properties. Therefore, as biologists, significant challenges are: (1) to identify and catalogue biological diversity and characterize its structure across diverse landscapes and archipelagos; and (2) to assess the nature of interactions with other taxa in order to predict the attributes of susceptible versus resilient communities in the face of abiotic and biotic change.

                                                    Discovery and taxonomic characterization of biodiversity

                                                    One of the first challenges is to recognize (and then close) the taxonomic impediment gap on islands. Islands have higher proportions of endemic species (Kier et al. Reference Kier, Kreft, Lee, Jetz, Ibisch, Nowicki, Mutke and Barthlott2009), but bear a disproportionate burden of global extinctions (Manne et al. Reference Manne, Brooks and Pimm1999). In order to gauge more closely the relative impact of anthropogenic change on island systems we need an accurate picture of both richness and endemism on islands, yet, considering that archipelagos such as Hawaiʻi and Macaronesia are relatively well studied with regards to eco-evolutionary theory, a surprising portion of island diversity remains undescribed (Fig. 3(a)). This shortfall varies between archipelagos, but can be substantial, and variation in taxonomic effort within and between archipelagos has the potential to obscure biogeographic patterns in species richness (Gray & Cavers Reference Gray and Cavers2014). For example, the Azores (Portugal) may have so few of its extant species described that reliable quantitative estimates of its true diversity are not possible (Lobo & Borges Reference Lobo, Borges, Serrano, Borges, Boieiro and Oromí2010). This taxonomic impediment is especially worrying given the multitude of threats that island biotas face; much diversity may have gone or will go extinct without ever being taxonomically described. These anthropogenic extinctions are already likely masking pre-human biogeographic patterns of diversity (Cardoso et al. Reference Cardoso, Arnedo, Triantis and Borges2010).

                                                    Figure 3 Temporal trends in taxonomic description and taxonomic effort. (a) Cumulative number of described species over time for various arthropod orders for the Azorean, Canarian and Hawaiian archipelagos. Data were obtained from recent arthropod checklists (Nishida Reference Nishida2002; Borges et al. Reference Borges, Cunha, Gabriel, Martins, Silva and Vieira2005). (b) Trends over time (5-year bins) in the number of taxonomists and the number of species described per taxonomist. (c) Distribution of species descriptions among taxonomists. Most taxonomists describe few species, but there are fewer singletons (taxonomists that describe only one species) on Hawaiʻi. The lines represent non-parametric smoothed best-fit lines (LOESS regression).

                                                    There are, however, some promising signs. Using comprehensive taxonomic checklists for the arthropod biotas of three archipelagos (Nishida Reference Nishida2002; Borges et al. Reference Borges, Cunha, Gabriel, Martins, Silva and Vieira2005), the rate of species description does not appear to be abating (Fig. 3(b)). In particular, the rate of growth in the number of taxonomists working on Canary Island arthropods appears to be increasing (Fig. 3(b)). This trend of increasing numbers of taxonomists also appears to be true globally for a variety of taxonomic groups (Joppa et al. Reference Joppa, Roberts, Myers and Pimm2011). Further, the species-to-taxonomist ratio appears not to be declining (Fig. 3(b)), suggesting that the declining pool of undescribed species (through cumulative taxonomic effort and/or species extinctions) has yet to limit the pace of current taxonomic efforts (cf. Joppa et al. Reference Joppa, Roberts, Myers and Pimm2011; Costello et al. Reference Costello, May and Stork2013). It is unclear for how long this trend of unabating taxonomic description will be sustained. Hawaiʻi appears to show a decreasing trend in numbers of taxonomists despite greater taxonomic efficiency, perhaps because most Hawaiian taxonomic effort is driven by proportionally fewer people (Fig. 3(c)).

                                                    Use of molecular methods may enhance the ability to identify cryptic species and stimulate subsequent taxonomic description. For example, molecular evidence suggests that the notoriously low endemism of the Azorean biota may be due to cryptic diversity (Schaefer et al. Reference Schaefer, Moura, Belo Maciel, Silva, Rumsey and Carine2011), and it is increasingly recognized that cryptic species may be a significant part of island biotas (Crawford & Stuessy Reference Crawford and Stuessy2016). Advances in rapid biodiversity assessment techniques (e.g. meta-barcoding) now allow rapid and bulk recovery of molecular sequences from pooled community samples or environmental DNA, which may help elucidate community structures from samples that would otherwise be limited by traditional taxonomic approaches (Rees et al. Reference Rees, Maddison, Middleditch, Patmore and Gough2014; Papadopoulou et al. Reference Papadopoulou, Taberlet and Zinger2015).

                                                    Community resilience in the face of change

                                                    Given that islands harbour high species diversity, local endemism and particular niche affinities, a key challenge is to understand how communities of organisms will respond to human-mediated change in both biotic and abiotic variables. With regards to climate, recent approaches now incorporate the role of climatic cycles and associated changes in ocean currents, in conjunction with changes in area, isolation and elevation, all of which may have shaped biodiversity on many islands in the past (Fernández-Palacios et al. Reference Fernández-Palacios, Rijsdijk, Norder, Otto, de Nascimento, Fernández Lugo, Tjørve and Whittaker2016). For instance, there is clear evidence that communities are under pressure from changing climate, from the islands of the Mascarenes, Greece (Triantis & Mylonas Reference Triantis, Mylonas, Gillespie and Clague2009), the Azorean Islands (Ferreira et al. Reference Ferreira, Cardoso, Borges, Gabriel, de Azevedo, Reis, Araújo and Elias2016) and Bermuda (Glasspool & Sterrer Reference Glasspool, Sterrer, Gillespie and Clague2009). Small, low-elevation, topographically homogeneous islands are least resilient to climate change pressures as a result of rising sea levels, and in many instances local habitat alteration interacts synergistically with novel abiotic perturbations, causing even greater consequences for island communities (Harter et al. Reference Harter, Irl, Seo, Steinbauer, Gillespie, Triantis, Fernández Palacios and Beierkuhnlein2015).

                                                    Another challenge is to determine how communities will change from additions and deletions of species. Existing communities may be compiled of well-established non-native taxa currently playing similar functional roles to those species that have become extirpated (Davis et al. Reference Davis, Chew, Hobbs, Lugo, Ewel, Vermeij, Brown, Rosenzweig, Gardener and Carroll2011). Network theory is providing an increasingly robust framework to understand species interactions and to predict the consequences of disturbance at a community level (Traveset et al. Reference Traveset, Tur, Trøjelsgaard, Heleno, Castro-Urgal and Olesen2016b), showing both how alien species infiltrate receptive communities and how and to what extent they can impact and modify the structure of such communities (Romanuk et al. Reference Romanuk, Zhou, Valdovinos, Martinez, Bohan, Dumbrell and Massol2017). Combining plant–pollinator networks with islands as model systems serves to identify quantitative metrics that can describe changes in network patterns relevant to conservation (Traveset et al. Reference Traveset, Tur, Trøjelsgaard, Heleno, Castro-Urgal and Olesen2016b). Some metrics may be suitable indicators of anthropogenic changes in pollinator communities that may allow assessment of structural and functional robustness and integrity of ecosystems (Kaiser-Bunbury & Blüthgen Reference Kaiser-Bunbury and Blüthgen2015). In some cases, native pollinators may be more resistant to exotic fauna than predicted by theory (Picanço et al. Reference Picanço, Rigal, Matthews, Cardoso and Borges2017).

                                                    CONCLUDING REMARKS

                                                    Beyond the anthropogenic pressures impinging upon the ecological and evolutionary study of islands, human institutions may at times impede fundamental research and environmental conservation. Research may be hindered on islands due to confusion in political jurisdiction, as islands often are managed on a regional basis by multiple institutions or countries. Additional institutional challenges include: mobilizing and accessibility of natural history collections and associated data; balancing public stakeholders with conservation objectives (e.g. hunting lobby vs. eradication); and navigating national and international funding agencies. Paradoxically, often the best economic health for islands is provided by programmes such as tourism and agriculture that, when managed poorly, may be dilapidating to the future of island ecosystems.

                                                    Current discourse analyses how island systems negotiate with the challenges of balancing development with sustainability (Connell Reference Connellin press), incorporating indigenous and local knowledge to improve island environmental futures (Lauer Reference Lauerin press) and harnessing environmental education on islands (Fumiyo in press). Strides towards uniting researchers across disciplines for the study of island biology and conservation are now evident. The fledgling Society for Island Biology (SIB), founded at the summer 2016 Island Biology meeting in the Azores (Gabriel et al. Reference Gabriel, Elias, Amorim and Borges2016), is one such example. There have been cross-disciplinary conferences organized around current research for island biology (Kueffer et al. Reference Kueffer, Drake and Fernández-Palacios2014) and special issues of journals focusing on the discourse of such symposia (Traveset et al. Reference Traveset, Fernández-Palacios, Kueffer, Bellingham, Morden and Drake2016a). A working group of researchers has put together a survey of the 50 fundamental questions in island biology (Patiño et al. Reference Patiño, Whittaker, Borges, Fernández-Palacios, Ah-Peng, Araújo, Ávila, Cardoso, Cornuault, de Boer, de Nascimento, Gil, González Castro, Gruner, Heleno, Hortal, Illera, Kaiser-Bunbury, Matthews, Papadopoulou, Pettorelli, Price, Santos, Steinbauer, Triantis, Valente, Vargas, Weigelt and Emerson2017). Such open dialogue will help to uncover the similarities in island systems and find suitable solutions that may be applied across islands and the mainland for anthropogenic disturbance. Moreover, the characteristics of islands that make them both exquisite study systems for fundamental ecology and evolution and the archetypal endangered systems on the leading edge of global change also position islands as the irreplaceable testing grounds for conservation solutions.

                                                    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

                                                    An early version of this manuscript benefitted from critical comments by Ian J. Wang, Jeffrey Frederick, Michael L. Yuan, Drew Hart, Guinevere O. Wogan and Emma Steigerwald.

                                                    CONFLICT OF INTEREST

                                                    None.

                                                    FUNDING

                                                    The research was supported by the National Science Foundation (D. S. Gruner, DEB 1240774) and (R. G. Gillespie, DEB 1241253).


                                                    References

                                                    Arrhenius, O. (1921) Species and area. Journal of Ecology 9 (1): 9599.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Borges, P. A., Lobo, J. M., Azevedo, E. B., Gaspar, C. S., Melo, C. & Nunes, L. V. (2006) Invasibility and species richness of island endemic arthropods: a general model of endemic vs. exotic species. Journal of Biogeography 33 (1): 169187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Borges, P. A. V. & Brown, V. K. (1999) Effect of island geological age on the arthropod species richness of Azorean pastures. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 66 (3): 373410.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Borges, P. A. V., Cunha, R., Gabriel, R., Martins, A. F., Silva, L. & Vieira, V. (2005) A List of the Terrestrial Fauna (Mollusca and Arthropoda) and Flora (Bryophyta, Pteridophyta and Spermatophyta) from the Azores. Horta, Angra do Heroísmo and Ponta Delgada, Portugal: Direcção Regional do Ambiente and Universidade dos Açores.Google Scholar
                                                    Borregaard, M. K., Amorim, I. R., Borges, P. A. V., Cabral, J. S., Fernández-Palacios, J. M., Field, R., Heaney, L. R., Kreft, H., Matthews, T. J., Olesen, J. M., Price, J., Rigal, F., Steinbauer, M. J., Triantis, K. A., Valente, L., Weigelt, P. & Whittaker, R. J. (2017) Oceanic island biogeography through the lens of the general dynamic model: assessment and prospect. Biological Reviews 92 (2): 830853.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Brooks, T. M., Mittermeier, R. A., Mittermeier, C. G., Da Fonseca, G. A. B., Rylands, A. B., Konstant, W. R., Flick, P., Pilgrim, J., Oldfield, S., Magin, G. & Hilton-Taylor, C. (2002) Habitat loss and extinction in the hotspots of biodiversity. Conservation Biology 16 (4): 909923.Google Scholar
                                                    Brown, J. H. & Kodric-Brown, A. (1977) Turnover rates in insular biogeography: effect of immigration on extinction. Ecology 58 (2): 445449.Google Scholar
                                                    Burney, D. A., James, H. F., Burney, L. P., Olson, S. L., Kikuchi, W., Wagner, W. L., Burney, M., McCloskey, D., Kikuchi, D., Grady, F. V., Gage, R., II & Nishek, R. (2001) Fossil evidence for a diverse biota from Kaua'i and its transformation since human arrival. Ecological Monographs 71 (4): 615641.Google Scholar
                                                    Cabin, R. J. (2013) Restoring Paradise: Rethinking and Rebuilding Nature in Hawaii. Honolulu, HI, USA: University of Hawaii Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Camp, R. J., Pratt, T. K., Gorresen, P. M., Jeffrey, J. J. & Woodworth, B. L. (2010) Population trends of forest birds at Hakalau forest national wildlife refuge, Hawai‘i. The Condor 112 (2): 196212.Google Scholar
                                                    Caramel, L. (2014) Besieged by the rising tides of climate change, Kiribati buys land in Fiji. In: Guardian Weekly, London, UK: Guardian Media Group [www document]. URL https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/jul/01/kiribati-climate-change-fiji-vanua-levu Google Scholar
                                                    Cardoso, P., Arnedo, M. A., Triantis, K. A. & Borges, P. A. V. (2010) Drivers of diversity in Macaronesian spiders and the role of species extinctions. Journal of Biogeography 37 (6): 10341046.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Carson, H. L., Lockwood, J. P. & Craddock, E. M. (1990) Extinction and recolonization of local populations on a growing shield volcano. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 87 (18): 70557057.Google Scholar
                                                    Chambers, J. Q., Negron-Juarez, R. I., Marra, D. M., Di Vittorio, A., Tews, J., Roberts, D., Ribeiro, G. H., Trumbore, S. E. & Higuchi, N. (2013) The steady-state mosaic of disturbance and succession across an old-growth Central Amazon forest landscape. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 110 (10): 39493954.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Chase, J. M. & Myers, J. A. (2011) Disentangling the importance of ecological niches from stochastic processes across scales. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 366 (1576): 23512363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Connell, J. (2013) Islands at Risk? Environments, Economies and Contemporary Change. London, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Connell, J. (in press) Environmental Conservation.Google Scholar
                                                    Costello, M. J., May, R. M. & Stork, N. E. (2013) Can we name Earth's species before they go extinct? Science 339 (6118): 413416.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Cox, P. A. & Elmqvist, T. (2000) Pollinator extinction in the Pacific Islands. Conservation Biology 14 (5): 12371239.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Crawford, D. J. & Archibald, J. K. (2017) Island floras as model systems for studies of plant speciation: prospects and challenges. Journal of Systematics and Evolution 55 (1): 115.Google Scholar
                                                    Crawford, D. J. & Stuessy, T. F. (2016) Cryptic variation, molecular data, and the challenge of conserving plant diversity in oceanic archipelagos: the critical role of plant systematics. Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy 46 (2): 129148.Google Scholar
                                                    Crowley, B. E., Godfrey, L. R., Bankoff, R. J., Perry, G. H., Culleton, B. J., Kennett, D. J., Sutherland, M. R., Samonds, K. E. & Burney, D. A. (2017) Island-wide aridity did not trigger recent megafaunal extinctions in Madagascar. Ecography (Epub ahead of print) doi:10.1111/ecog.02376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Cushman, J. H. (1995) Ecosystem-level consequences of species additions and deletions on islands. In: Islands: Biological Diversity and Ecosystem Function, eds. Vitousek, P. M., Loope, L. L. & Adsersen, H., pp. 135147. New York, NY, USA: Springer-Verlag.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    D'Antonio, C. M. & Dudley, T. L. (1995) Biological invasions as agents of change on islands versus mainlands. In: Islands: Biological Diversity and Ecosystem Function, eds. Vitousek, P. M., Loope, L. L. & Adsersen, H., pp. 103121. New York, NY, USA: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
                                                    Darlington, P. J. (1957) Zoogeography. New York, NY, USA: John Wiley.Google Scholar
                                                    Darwin, C. (1859) On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection. London, UK: John Murray.Google Scholar
                                                    Davis, M. A., Chew, M. K., Hobbs, R. J., Lugo, A. E., Ewel, J. J., Vermeij, G. J., Brown, J. H., Rosenzweig, M. L., Gardener, M. R. & Carroll, S. P. (2011) Don't judge species on their origins. Nature 474 (7350): 153154.Google Scholar
                                                    Diamond, J. M. (1975) Assembly of species communities. In: Ecology and Evolution of Communities, eds. Diamond, J. M. & Cody, M. L., pp. 342444. Cambridge, MA, USA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Ehrlich, P. R. & Ehrlich, A. H. (1981) Extinction: The Causes and Consequences of the Disappearance of Species. New York, NY, USA: Random House.Google Scholar
                                                    Elton, C. (1958) The Ecology of Invasion by Plants and Animals. London, UK: Methuen.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Fernández-Palacios, J. M., Rijsdijk, K. F., Norder, S. J., Otto, R., de Nascimento, L., Fernández Lugo, S., Tjørve, E. & Whittaker, R. J. (2016) Towards a glacial-sensitive model of island biogeography. Global Ecology and Biogeography 25 (7): 817830.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Ferreira, M. T., Cardoso, P., Borges, P. A., Gabriel, R., de Azevedo, E. B., Reis, F., Araújo, M. B. & Elias, R. B. (2016) Effects of climate change on the distribution of indigenous species in oceanic islands (Azores). Climatic Change 138 (3–4): 603615.Google Scholar
                                                    Florencio, M., Rigal, F., Borges, P. A., Cardoso, P., Santos, A. M. & Lobo, J. M. (2016) The role of plant fidelity and land-use changes on island exotic and indigenous canopy spiders at local and regional scales. Biological Invasions 18 (8): 23092324.Google Scholar
                                                    Foley, J. A., DeFries, R., Asner, G. P., Barford, C., Bonan, G., Carpenter, S. R., Chapin, F. S., Coe, M. T., Daily, G. C. & Gibbs, H. K. (2005) Global consequences of land use. Science 309 (5734): 570574.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Frankham, R. (1996) Relationship of genetic variation to population size in wildlife. Conservation Biology 10 (6): 15001508.Google Scholar
                                                    Fukami, T. (2015) Historical contingency in community assembly: integrating niches, species pools, and priority effects. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 46: 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Fumiyo (in press) Environmental Conservation.Google Scholar
                                                    Gabriel, R., Elias, R. B., Amorim, I. R. & Borges, P. A. V. (2016) Conference program and abstracts of the 2nd International Conference on Island Evolution, Ecology and Conservation: Island Biology 2016, 18–22 July 2016, Angra do Heroísmo, Azores, Portugal. Arquipelago Life and Marine Sciences (Supplement 9): 565.Google Scholar
                                                    Gillespie, R. G. (2016) Island time and the interplay between ecology and evolution in species diversification. Evolutionary Applications 9 (1): 5373.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Gillespie, R. G. & Clague, D. A. (2009) Encyclopedia of Islands. Berkeley, CA, USA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Gillespie, R. G., Claridge, E. M. & Goodacre, S. L. (2008) Biogeography of the fauna of French Polynesia: diversification within and between a series of hot spot archipelagos. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 363 (1508): 33353346.Google Scholar
                                                    Gillespie, R. G. & Roderick, G. K. (2002) Arthropods on islands: colonization, speciation, and conservation. Annual Review of Entomology 47 (1): 595632.Google Scholar
                                                    Gillespie, R. G., Rominger, A. J. & Lim, J. Y. (2017) The theory of evolutionary biogeography. In: The Theory of Evolution, eds. Scheiner, S. & Mindell, D.. Chicago, IL, USA: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Glasspool, A. F. & Sterrer, W. (2009) Bermuda. In: Encyclopedia of Islands, eds. Gillespie, R. G. & Clague, D. A., pp. 9598. Berkeley, CA, USA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Golden, C. D., Bonds, M. H., Brashares, J. S., Rasolofoniaina, B. J. R. & Kremen, C. (2014) Economic valuation of subsistence harvest of wildlife in Madagascar. Conservation Biology 28 (1): 234243.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Gotelli, N. J. & McCabe, D. J. (2002) Species co-occurrence: a meta-analysis of J. M. Diamond's assembly rules model. Ecology 83 (8): 20912096.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Grant, P. R. & Grant, B. R. (2011) How and Why Species Multiply: The Radiation of Darwin's Finches. Princeton, NJ, USA: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Grant, P. R. & Grant, B. R. (2016) Introgressive hybridization and natural selection in Darwin's finches. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 117 (4): 812822.Google Scholar
                                                    Gray, A. & Cavers, S. (2014) Island biogeography, the effects of taxonomic effort and the importance of island niche diversity to single-island endemic species. Systematic Biology 63 (1): 5565.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Green, M. (2016) Contested territory. Nature Climate Change 6 (9): 817820.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Gruner, D. S. (2007) Geological age, ecosystem development, and local resource constraints on arthropod community structure in the Hawaiian Islands. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 90 (3): 551570.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Hadfield, M. G., Miller, S. E. & Anne, H. C. (1993) The decimation of endemic Hawai‘ian tree snails by alien predators. American Zoologist 33 (6): 610622.Google Scholar
                                                    Harmon, L. J., Harrison, S. & Price, T. (2015) Species diversity is dynamic and unbounded at local and continental scales. The American Naturalist 185 (5): 584593.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Harter, D. E. V., Irl, S. D. H., Seo, B., Steinbauer, M. J., Gillespie, R., Triantis, K. A., Fernández Palacios, J.-M. & Beierkuhnlein, C. (2015) Impacts of global climate change on the floras of oceanic islands: projections, implications and current knowledge. Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics 17 (2): 160183.Google Scholar
                                                    Holt, B. G., Lessard, J.-P., Borregaard, M. K., Fritz, S. A., Araújo, M. B., Dimitrov, D., Fabre, P.H., Graham, C. H., Graves, G. R. & Jønsson, K. A. (2013) An update of Wallace's zoogeographic regions of the world. Science 339 (6115): 7478.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Hooper, D. U., Chapin, F. S., Ewel, J. J., Hector, A., Inchausti, P., Lavorel, S., Lawton, J. H., Lodge, D. M., Loreau, M. & Naeem, S. (2005) Effects of biodiversity on ecosystem functioning: a consensus of current knowledge. Ecological Monographs 75 (1): 335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Joppa, L. N., Roberts, D. L., Myers, N. & Pimm, S. L. (2011) Biodiversity hotspots house most undiscovered plant species. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108 (32): 1317113176.Google Scholar
                                                    Kaiser-Bunbury, C. N. & Blüthgen, N. (2015) Integrating network ecology with applied conservation: a synthesis and guide to implementation. AoB PLANTS 7: plv076.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Keay, J. & Keay, J. (1994) St. Kilda. In: Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland, pp. 840842. London, UK: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
                                                    Kier, G., Kreft, H., Lee, T. M., Jetz, W., Ibisch, P. L., Nowicki, C., Mutke, J. & Barthlott, W. (2009) A global assessment of endemism and species richness across island and mainland regions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 106 (23): 93229327.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Kueffer, C., Daehler, C. C., Torres-Santana, C. W., Lavergne, C., Meyer, J.-Y., Otto, R. & Silva, L. (2010) A global comparison of plant invasions on oceanic islands. Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics 12 (2): 145161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Kueffer, C., Drake, D. R. & Fernández-Palacios, J. M. (2014) Island biology: looking towards the future. Biology Letters 10 (10): 20140719.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Kunitz, S. J. (1996) Disease and Social Diversity: The European Impact on the Health of Non Europeans. New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Labriola, M. C. (2016) Marshall Islands. The Contemporary Pacific 28 (1): 193202.Google Scholar
                                                    LaPointe, D. A. (2008) Dispersal of Culex quinquefasciatus (Diptera: Culicidae) in a Hawaiian rain forest. Journal of Medical Entomology 45 (4): 600609.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    LaPointe, D. A., Atkinson, C. T. & Samuel, M. D. (2012) Ecology and conservation biology of avian malaria. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1249 (1): 211226.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Lauer, M. (in press) Changing understandings of local knowledge in island environments. Environmental Conservation.Google Scholar
                                                    Lawton, J. H. (1994) What do species do in ecosystems? Oikos 71 (3): 367374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Leibold, M. A., Holyoak, M., Mouquet, N., Amarasekare, P., Chase, J. M., Hoopes, M. F., Holt, R. D., Shurin, J. B., Law, R. & Tilman, D. (2004) The metacommunity concept: a framework for multi-scale community ecology. Ecology Letters 7 (7): 601613.Google Scholar
                                                    Levins, R. (1969) Some demographic and genetic consequences of environmental heterogeneity for biological control. Bulletin of the Entomological Society of America 15 (3): 237240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Lim, J. Y. & Marshall, C. R. (2017) The true tempo of evolutionary radiation and decline revealed on the Hawaiian archipelago. Nature 543 (7647): 710713.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Lobo, J. M. & Borges, P. A. (2010) The provisional status of arthropod inventories in the Macaronesian islands. In: Terrestrial Arthropods of Macaronesia – Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution, eds. Serrano, A. R. M., Borges, P. A. V., Boieiro, M. & Oromí, P., pp. 3347. Lisbon, Portugal: Sociedade Portuguesa de Entomologia.Google Scholar
                                                    Lomolino, M. (2000) A call for a new paradigm of island biogeography. Global Ecology and Biogeography 9 (1): 16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Losos, J. B. & Parent, C. E. (2009) The speciation–area relationship. In: The Theory of Island Biogeography Revisited, eds. Losos, J. B. & Ricklefs, R. E., pp. 415438. Princeton, NJ, USA: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Lovette, I. J. (2008) Convergent evolution: raising a family from the dead. Current Biology 18 (24): R1132R1134.Google Scholar
                                                    MacArthur, R. H. & Wilson, E. O. (1967) The Theory of Island Biogeography. Princeton, NJ, USA: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Manne, L. L., Brooks, T. M. & Pimm, S. L. (1999) Relative risk of extinction of passerine birds on continents and islands. Nature 399 (6733): 258261.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Nishida, G. M. (2002) Hawaiian Terrestrial Arthropod Checklist. Honolulu, HI, USA: Bishop Museum.Google Scholar
                                                    Nurse, L. A., McLean, R. F., Agard, J., Briguglio, L. P., Duvat-Magnan, V., Pelesikoti, N., Tompkins, E. & Webb, A. (2014) Small Islands. In: Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Part B: Regional Aspects. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, eds. Barros, V. R., Field, C. B., Dokken, D. J., Mastrandrea, M. D., Mach, K. J., Bilir, T. E., Chatterjee, M., Ebi, K. L., Estrada, Y. O., Genova, R. C., Girma, B., Kissel, E. S., Levy, A. N., MacCracken, S., Mastrandrea, P. R. & White, L. L., pp. 16131654. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Papadopoulou, A. & Knowles, L. L. (2015) Genomic tests of the species-pump hypothesis: recent island connectivity cycles drive population divergence but not speciation in Caribbean crickets across the Virgin Islands. Evolution 69 (6): 15011517.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Papadopoulou, A., Taberlet, P. & Zinger, L. (2015) Metagenome skimming for phylogenetic community ecology: a new era in biodiversity research. Molecular Ecology 24 (14): 35153517.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Patiño, J., Whittaker, R. J., Borges, P. A. V., Fernández-Palacios, J. M., Ah-Peng, C., Araújo, M. B., Ávila, S. P., Cardoso, P., Cornuault, J., de Boer, E. J., de Nascimento, L., Gil, A., González Castro, A., Gruner, D. S., Heleno, R., Hortal, J., Illera, J. C., Kaiser-Bunbury, C. N., Matthews, T. J., Papadopoulou, A., Pettorelli, N., Price, J. P., Santos, A. M. C., Steinbauer, M. J., Triantis, K. A., Valente, L., Vargas, P., Weigelt, P. & Emerson, B. C. (2017) A roadmap for island biology: 50 fundamental questions after 50 years of the theory of island biogeography. Journal of Biogeography 44 (5): 963983.Google Scholar
                                                    Perroy, R. L., Melrose, J. & Cares, S. (2016) The evolving agricultural landscape of post plantation Hawai‘i. Applied Geography 76: 154162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Picanço, A., Rigal, F., Matthews, T. J., Cardoso, P. & Borges, P. A. V. (2017) Impact of land-use change on flower-visiting insect communities on an oceanic island. Insect Conservation and Diversity 10 (3): 211223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Preston, F. W. (1960) Time and space and the variation of species. Ecology 41 (4): 611627.Google Scholar
                                                    Price, J. P. & Elliott-Fisk, D. (2004) Topographic history of the Maui Nui complex, Hawai‘i, and its implications for biogeography. Pacific Science 58 (1): 2745.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Ralph, C. J. & Fancy, S. G. (1994) Timing of breeding and molting in six species of Hawaiian honeycreepers. The Condor 96 (1): 151161.Google Scholar
                                                    Rees, H. C., Maddison, B. C., Middleditch, D. J., Patmore, J. R. M. & Gough, K. C. (2014) The detection of aquatic animal species using environmental DNA – a review of eDNA as a survey tool in ecology. Journal of Applied Ecology 51 (5): 14501459.Google Scholar
                                                    Romanuk, T. N., Zhou, Y., Valdovinos, F. S. & Martinez, N. D. (2017) Robustness trade-offs in model food webs: invasion probability decreases while invasion consequences increase with connectance. In: Advances in Ecological Research (vol. 56), eds. Bohan, D. A., Dumbrell, A. J. & Massol, F., pp. 263291. Oxford, UK: Academic Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Rominger, A. J., Goodman, K. R., Lim, J. Y., Armstrong, E. E., Becking, L. E., Bennett, G. M., Brewer, M. S., Cotoras, D. D., Ewing, C. P., Harte, J., Martinez, N. D., O'Grady, P. M., Percy, D. M., Price, D. K., Roderick, G. K., Shaw, K. L., Valdovinos, F. S., Gruner, D. S. & Gillespie, R. G. (2016) Community assembly on isolated islands: macroecology meets evolution. Global Ecology and Biogeography 25 (7): 769780.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Rosen, D. E. (1975) A vicariance model of Caribbean biogeography. Systematic Biology 24 (4): 431464.Google Scholar
                                                    Rosenzweig, M. L. (1995) Species Diversity in Space and Time. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Rosindell, J. & Phillimore, A. B. (2011) A unified model of island biogeography sheds light on the zone of radiation. Ecology Letters 14 (6): 552560.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Schaefer, H., Moura, M., Belo Maciel, M. G., Silva, L., Rumsey, F. J. & Carine, M. A. (2011) The Linnean shortfall in oceanic island biogeography: a case study in the Azores. Journal of Biogeography 38 (7): 13451355.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Seneviratne, S. I., Nicholls, N., Easterling, D., Goodess, C. M., Kanae, S., Kossin, J., Luo, Y., Marengo, J., McInnes, K. & Rahimi, M. (2012) Changes in climate extremes and their impacts on the natural physical environment. In: Managing the Risks of Extreme Events and Disasters to Advance Climate Change Adaptation: A Special Report of Working Groups I and II of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, eds. Field, C. B., Barros, B., Stocker, T. F., Qin, D., Dokken, D. J., Ebi, K. L., Mastrandrea, M. D., Mach, K. J., Plattner, G.-K., Allen, S. K., Tignor, M. & Midgley, P. M., pp. 109230. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Shaw, K. L. & Gillespie, R. G. (2016) Comparative phylogeography of oceanic archipelagos: Hotspots for inferences of evolutionary process. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 113 (29): 79867993.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Shenk, J. (2011) Island President [film]. New York, NY, USA: First Run Features.Google Scholar
                                                    Simberloff, D. S. & Abele, L. G. (1976) Island biogeography theory and conservation practice. Science 191 (4224): 285286.Google Scholar
                                                    Simberloff, D. S. & Von Holle, B. (1999) Positive interactions of nonindigenous species: invasional meltdown? Biological Invasions 1 (1): 2132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Simon, C. (1987) Hawaiian evolutionary biology: an introduction. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 2 (7): 175178.Google Scholar
                                                    Sodhi, N., Brook, B. W. & Bradshaw, C. J. A. (2009) Causes and consequences of species extinctions. In: Princeton Guide to Ecology, eds. Levin, S. A., Carpenter, S. R., Godfray, H. C. J., Kinzig, A. P., Loreau, M., Losos, J. B., Walker, B. & Wilcove, D. S., pp. 514520. Princeton, NJ, USA: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Steadman, D. W. (1995) Prehistoric extinctions of Pacific Island birds: biodiversity meets zooarchaeology. Science 267: 11231131.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Steadman, D. W. & Martin, P. S. (2003) The late Quaternary extinction and future resurrection of birds on Pacific islands. Earth-Science Reviews 61 (1): 133147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Terborgh, J., Lopez, L., Nunez, P., Rao, M., Shahabuddin, G., Orihuela, G., Riveros, M., Ascanio, R., Adler, G. H. & Lambert, T. D. (2001) Ecological meltdown in predator-free forest fragments. Science 294 (5548): 19231926.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Terzopoulou, S., Rigal, F., Whittaker, R. J., Borges, P. A. & Triantis, K. A. (2015) Drivers of extinction: the case of Azorean beetles. Biology Letters 11 (6): 20150273.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    The Nature Conservancy of Hawaii (2011) Waikamoi Preserve, East Maui: draft long range management plan, fiscal years 2013–2018 [www document]. URL http://dlnr.hawaii.gov/ecosystems/files/2013/09/Waikamoi_FY2013_2018_LRMP_DRAFT.pdf Google Scholar
                                                    Thomas, C. D., Cameron, A., Green, R. E., Bakkenes, M., Beaumont, L. J., Collingham, Y. C., Erasmus, B. F. N., De Siqueira, M. F., Grainger, A. & Hannah, L. (2004) Extinction risk from climate change. Nature 427 (6970): 145148.Google Scholar
                                                    Traveset, A., Fernández-Palacios, J. M., Kueffer, C., Bellingham, P. J., Morden, C. & Drake, D. R. (2016a) Advances in island plant biology since Sherwin Carlquist's Island Biology. AoB PLANTS 8: plv148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Traveset, A., Tur, C., Trøjelsgaard, K., Heleno, R., Castro-Urgal, R. & Olesen, J. M. (2016b) Global patterns of mainland and insular pollination networks. Global Ecology and Biogeography 25 (7): 880890.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Triantis, K. A. & Bhagwat, S. A. (2011) Applied island biogeography. In: Conservation Biogeography, eds. Ladle, R. J. & Whittaker, R. J., pp. 190223. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
                                                    Triantis, K. A. & Mylonas, M. (2009) Greek islands, biology. In: Encyclopedia of Islands, eds. Gillespie, R. G. & Clague, D. A., pp. 388392. Berkeley, CA, USA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
                                                    van Kleunen, M., Dawson, W. & Maurel, N. (2015) Characteristics of successful alien plants. Molecular Ecology 24 (9): 19541968.Google Scholar
                                                    Vitousek, P. M. (2004) Nutrient Cycling and Limitation: Hawai‘i as a Model System. Princeton, NJ, USA: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Vitousek, P. M., Walker, L. R., Whiteaker, L. D., Mueller-Dombois, D. & Matson, P. A. (1987) Biological invasion by Myrica faya alters ecosystem development in Hawaii. Science 238 (4828): 802804.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Wagner, W. L. & Funk, V. A., eds. (1995) Hawaiian Biogeography: Evolution on a Hot Spot Archipelago. Washington, DC, USA: Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Walker, B. H. (1992) Biodiversity and ecological redundancy. Conservation Biology 6 (1): 1823.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Wallace, A. R. (1880) Island Life, or, the Phenomena and Causes of Insular Faunas and Floras, Including a Revision and Attempted Solution of the Problem of Geological Climates. London, UK: Macmillan & Co.Google Scholar
                                                    Warren, B. H., Simberloff, D., Ricklefs, R. E., Aguilée, R., Condamine, F. L., Gravel, D., Morlon, H., Mouquet, N., Rosindell, J., Casquet, J., Conti, E., Cornuault, J., Fernández-Palacios, J. M., Hengl, T., Norder, S. J., Rijsdijk, K. F., Sanmartín, I., Strasberg, D., Triantis, K. A., Valente, L. M., Whittaker, R. J., Gillespie, R. G., Emerson, B. C. & Thébaud, C. (2015) Islands as model systems in ecology and evolution: prospects fifty years after MacArthur–Wilson. Ecology Letters 18 (2): 200217.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Whittaker, R. J., Araújo, M. B., Jepson, P., Ladle, R. J., Watson, J. E. & Willis, K. J. (2005) Conservation biogeography: assessment and prospect. Diversity and Distributions 11 (1): 323.Google Scholar
                                                    Whittaker, R. W., Triantis, K. A. & Ladle, R. J. (2008) A general dynamic theory for oceanic island biogeography. Journal of Biogeography 35: 977994.Google Scholar
                                                    Wilcox, B. A. (1978) Supersaturated island faunas: a species–age relationship for lizards on post Pleistocene land-bridge islands. Science 199 (4332): 996998.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
                                                    Willis, J. C. (1922) Age and Area: A Study in the Geographical Distribution and Origin of Species. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
                                                    Wilson, E. O. (1961) The nature of the taxon cycle in the Melanesian ant fauna. The American Naturalist 95 (882): 169193.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
                                                    Yoder, A. D., Campbell, C. R., Blanco, M. B., dos Reis, M., Ganzhorn, J. U., Goodman, S. M., Hunnicutt, K. E., Larsen, P. A., Kappeler, P. M. & Rasoloarison, R. M. (2016) Geogenetic patterns in mouse lemurs (genus Microcebus) reveal the ghosts of Madagascar's forests past. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 113 (29): 80498056.Google Scholar
                                                    Figure 0

                                                    Figure 1 Evolutionary assembly of de novo and fragment islands at varying levels of time and isolation. Differently shaded shapes represent species as they accumulate through colonization and through the formation of new species by both processes of anagenesis and cladogenesis. Black arrows indicate whether species are primarily accumulated by colonization (incoming arrow) or genetic divergence (arching arrow). (a) Fragment islands begin with biota similar to source. The number of species will decrease over ecological time as a result of relaxation and simply because of reduced area. Over evolutionary time, species diverge from original stock through anagenesis (unfilled circles), with the formation of paleo-endemics. (b) De novo islands are formed without life, thus the ecological space is open and available when they first appear. Over time, species increase through both colonization and the formation of new species by cladogenesis (triangles). At high isolation, multiple neo-endemics may form through adaptive radiation.


                                                    Figure 1

                                                    Figure 2 Examples of major threats to island ecosystems, with illustrations from the Hawaiian Islands and Micronesia. (a) Urban development. Aerial photo of Honolulu, showing the entirely modified urban environment of Waikiki. The initial wetlands were first modified in the mid-15th century to cultivate wetland taro and for fishponds, then they were drained in the 1920s with construction of the Ala Wai Canal to mitigate mosquito-borne human disease with further urbanization. Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (b) Crops. Pineapples, with sugar, were major plantation crops in Hawaiʻi starting in the mid-1800s (Perroy et al.2016). Acreage in pineapple and sugar halved between 1980 and 2015 and Maui Land and Pineapple Company (shown here) closed in 2009. Currently, many plantations lie idle and weed ridden, with an uncertain future. Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (c) Pasture. Cattle were introduced into the Hawaiian Islands in the 1790s, and ranching started in the early-to-mid-1800s, and patches of native forest became increasingly restricted to inaccessible gulches, as shown in this photo of Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge. Recent efforts are restoring areas of degraded pasture and forest, such as those at Auwahi on Maui (Cabin 2013). Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (d) Climate change. The many atolls that make up Micronesia now suffer frequent inundation as a result of sea level rise, as illustrated in this photo of Majuro in the Marshall Islands, which has become a vocal participant in global climate change discussions (Labriola 2016). Many low-lying island nations of the Pacific are buying tracts of land on higher islands (Green 2016). Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (e) Invasions. One of the most insidious invaders of native ecosystems in the Hawaiian Islands is kahili ginger, Hedychium gardnerianum (The Nature Conservancy of Hawaii 2011), as shown: the left side shows a monotypic stand of ginger, the right a relatively pristine forest. The fence in front of the ginger, marking the boundary of the Waikamoi Preserve, in no way inhibits the spread, which is controlled to the extent possible by the diligence of The Nature Conservancy of Hawaii employees. Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (f) Disease. Studies, such as that which is shown here at Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge, show that native honeycreepers such as the ʻapapane are vulnerable to pox and malaria (LaPointe 2008) and might be affected by upslope expansion of avian diseases (Camp et al.2010). Photo credit: George K. Roderick. (g) Direct exploitation. In the Hawaiian Islands, the strongest evidence of direct exploitation is the use of native bird feathers in capes. Perhaps most dramatic was the ‘Oʻo, which was common in the 1800s, but was extinct by the mid-1900s, and was exploited for a small tuft of yellow shoulder feathers (Lovette 2008). Photo credit: Honolulu Museum of Art.


                                                    Figure 2

                                                    Figure 3 Temporal trends in taxonomic description and taxonomic effort. (a) Cumulative number of described species over time for various arthropod orders for the Azorean, Canarian and Hawaiian archipelagos. Data were obtained from recent arthropod checklists (Nishida 2002; Borges et al.2005). (b) Trends over time (5-year bins) in the number of taxonomists and the number of species described per taxonomist. (c) Distribution of species descriptions among taxonomists. Most taxonomists describe few species, but there are fewer singletons (taxonomists that describe only one species) on Hawaiʻi. The lines represent non-parametric smoothed best-fit lines (LOESS regression).

                                                    You have Access
                                                    Cited by
                                                    This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.

                                                    Gillespie, Rosemary G. and Will, Kipling 2018. Insect Biodiversity. p. 81.

                                                    Yeung, Norine W and Hayes, Kenneth A 2018. Biodiversity and Extinction of Hawaiian Land Snails: How Many Are Left Now and What Must We Do To Conserve Them—A Reply to Solem (1990). Integrative and Comparative Biology,

                                                    Chi, Yuan Sun, Jingkuan Fu, Zhanyong and Xie, Zuolun 2019. Spatial pattern of plant diversity in a group of uninhabited islands from the perspectives of island and site scales. Science of The Total Environment, Vol. 664, Issue. , p. 334.

                                                    Lim, Jun Y. Marshall, Charles R. Zimmer, Elizabeth A. and Wagner, Warren L. 2019. Multiple colonizations of the Pacific by Peperomia (Piperaceae): Complex patterns of long‐distance dispersal and parallel radiations on the Hawaiian Islands. Journal of Biogeography, Vol. 46, Issue. 12, p. 2651.

                                                    Shell, Wyatt A. and Rehan, Sandra M. 2019. Invasive range expansion of the small carpenter bee, Ceratina dentipes (Hymenoptera: Apidae) into Hawaii with implications for native endangered species displacement. Biological Invasions, Vol. 21, Issue. 4, p. 1155.

                                                    Huang, Jen-Pan 2019. Holocene Population Decline and Conservation Implication for the Western Hercules Beetle, Dynastes grantii (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae). Journal of Heredity, Vol. 110, Issue. 5, p. 629.

                                                    Torre, Giancarlo Fernández‐Lugo, Silvia Guarino, Riccardo and Fernández‐Palacios, José María 2019. Network analysis by simulated annealing of taxa and islands of Macaronesia (North Atlantic Ocean). Ecography, Vol. 42, Issue. 4, p. 768.

                                                    Hibit, Joshua and Daehler, Curtis C. 2019. Long-term decline of native tropical dry forest remnants in an invaded Hawaiian landscape. Biodiversity and Conservation, Vol. 28, Issue. 7, p. 1699.

                                                    Gramazio, Pietro Chatziefstratiou, Eleni Petropoulos, Constantinos Chioti, Vasileia Mylona, Photini Kapotis, George Vilanova, Santiago Prohens, Jaime and Papasotiropoulos, Vasileios 2019. Multi-Level Characterization of Eggplant Accessions from Greek Islands and the Mainland Contributes to the Enhancement and Conservation of this Germplasm and Reveals a Large Diversity and Signatures of Differentiation between both Origins. Agronomy, Vol. 9, Issue. 12, p. 887.

                                                    Pizzitutti, Francesco Brewington, Laura and Walsh, Stephen J. 2020. Land Cover and Land Use Change on Islands. p. 183.

                                                    Guzmán-Colón, Diana K. Pidgeon, Anna M. Martinuzzi, Sebastián and Radeloff, Volker C. 2020. Conservation planning for island nations: Using a network analysis model to find novel opportunities for landscape connectivity in Puerto Rico. Global Ecology and Conservation, Vol. 23, Issue. , p. e01075.

                                                    Stuessy, Tod F. 2020. The importance of historical ecology for interpreting evolutionary processes in plants of oceanic islands. Journal of Systematics and Evolution, Vol. 58, Issue. 6, p. 751.

                                                    Fatihah-Syafiq, Muhamad Badli-Sham, Baizul Hafsyam Fahmi-Ahmad, Muhammad Aqmal-Naser, Mohamad Rizal, Syed Ahmad Azmi, Mohd Shahrizan Azrul Grismer, Larry L. and Ahmad, Amirrudin B. 2020. Checklist of herpetofauna in the severely degraded ecosystem of Bidong Island, Peninsular Malaysia, South China Sea. ZooKeys, Vol. 985, Issue. , p. 143.

                                                    Larjosto, Vilja 2020. Islands of the Anthropocene. Area, Vol. 52, Issue. 1, p. 38.

                                                    Votýpka, Jan Kment, Petr Yurchenko, Vyacheslav and Lukeš, Julius 2020. Endangered monoxenous trypanosomatid parasites: a lesson from island biogeography. Biodiversity and Conservation, Vol. 29, Issue. 13, p. 3635.

                                                    Norder, Sietze J. de Lima, Ricardo F. de Nascimento, Lea Lim, Jun Y. Fernández-Palacios, José María Romeiras, Maria M. Elias, Rui Bento Cabezas, Francisco J. Catarino, Luís Ceríaco, Luis M.P. Castilla-Beltrán, Alvaro Gabriel, Rosalina de Sequeira, Miguel Menezes Rijsdijk, Kenneth F. Nogué, Sandra Kissling, W. Daniel van Loon, E. Emiel Hall, Marcus Matos, Margarida and Borges, Paulo A.V. 2020. Global change in microcosms: Environmental and societal predictors of land cover change on the Atlantic Ocean Islands. Anthropocene, Vol. 30, Issue. , p. 100242.

                                                    Durán, Iván Marrero, Águedo Msanda, Fouad Harrouni, Cherif Gruenstaeudl, Michael Patiño, Jairo Caujapé‐Castells, Juli and García‐Verdugo, Carlos 2020. Iconic, threatened, but largely unknown: Biogeography of the Macaronesian dragon trees (Dracaena spp.) as inferred from plastid DNA markers. TAXON, Vol. 69, Issue. 2, p. 217.

                                                    Worring, Adrian Mayer, Benjamin E. and Hamacher, Kay 2021. Genetic algorithm niching by (Quasi-)infinite memory. p. 296.

                                                    Fabre, Pauline Bambridge, Tamatoa Claudet, Joachim Sterling, Eleanor and Mawyer, Alexander 2021. Contemporary Rāhui: placing Indigenous, conservation, and sustainability sciences in community-led conservation. Pacific Conservation Biology, Vol. 27, Issue. 4, p. 451.

                                                    Qin, Keyu Huang, Haijun Liu, Jingya Yan, Liwen Liu, Yanxia Bi, Haibo Zhang, Zehua and Zhang, Yi 2021. Impact Mechanism of the Ecological Vulnerability of Highly Developed Islands Based on the Bayesian Network Model—Applied to the Changshan Islands. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol. 18, Issue. 8, p. 4150.

                                                    ×
                                                    ×
                                                    Morty Proxy This is a proxified and sanitized view of the page, visit original site.

                                                    Save article to Kindle

                                                    To send this article to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about sending to your Kindle. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

                                                    Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

                                                    Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

                                                    Island ecology and evolution: challenges in the Anthropocene
                                                    Available formats
                                                    ×

                                                    Save article to Dropbox

                                                    To save this article to your Dropbox account, please select one or more formats and confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you used this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your Dropbox account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

                                                    Island ecology and evolution: challenges in the Anthropocene
                                                    Available formats
                                                    ×

                                                    Save article to Google Drive

                                                    To save this article to your Google Drive account, please select one or more formats and confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you used this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your Google Drive account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

                                                    Island ecology and evolution: challenges in the Anthropocene
                                                    Available formats
                                                    ×
                                                    ×

                                                    Reply to: Submit a response

                                                    Contents help

                                                    - No HTML tags allowed
                                                    - Web page URLs will display as text only
                                                    - Lines and paragraphs break automatically
                                                    - Attachments, images or tables are not permitted

                                                    Please enter your response.

                                                    Your details

                                                    Email help

                                                    Your email address will be used in order to notify you when your comment has been reviewed by the moderator and in case the author(s) of the article or the moderator need to contact you directly.

                                                    Please enter a valid email address.

                                                    You have entered the maximum number of contributors

                                                    Conflicting interests

                                                    Do you have any conflicting interests? * Conflicting interests help

                                                    Please list any fees and grants from, employment by, consultancy for, shared ownership in or any close relationship with, at any time over the preceding 36 months, any organisation whose interests may be affected by the publication of the response. Please also list any non-financial associations or interests (personal, professional, political, institutional, religious or other) that a reasonable reader would want to know about in relation to the submitted work. This pertains to all the authors of the piece, their spouses or partners.