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Coastal forests of eastern Africa: status, endemism patterns and their potential causes
Author(s) -
Burgess N. D.,
Clarke G. P.,
Rodgers W. A.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
biological journal of the linnean society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.906
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1095-8312
pISSN - 0024-4066
DOI - 10.1111/j.1095-8312.1998.tb00337.x
Subject(s) - endemism , tanzania , geography , threatened species , ecology , kenya , biodiversity , archipelago , agroforestry , biology , habitat , environmental planning
Eastern African coastal forests are located within the Swahili regional centre of endemism and Swahili‐Maputaland regional transition zone in eastern Africa, between 1d̀ North and 25d̀ South, and 34—41d̀ East. Approximately 3167 km 2 coastal forest remains: 2 km 2 in Somalia, 660 km 2 in Kenya, 697 km 2 in Tanzania, 16 km 2 in Malawi, 3 km 2 in Zimbabwe and perhaps 1790 km 2 in Mozambique. Most forests are small (≤ 20 km 2 ), and all but 19 are under 30 km 2 in area. Over 80% of coastal forest is located on government land, principally Forest Reserves; only 8.3 km 2 is found in National Parks (6.2 km 2 in Kenya (Arabuko‐Sokoke), 2 km 2 in Tanzania (Mafia Island) and tiny patches in Zimbabwe). Coastal forests are an important and highly threatened centre of endemism for plants ( c 550 endemic species), mammals (6 species), birds (9 species), reptiles (26 species), frogs (2 species), butterflies (79 species), snails (>86 species) and millipedes (>20 species). Endemic species are concentrated in the forests of the Tana River, between Malindi in Kenya to Tanga in northern Tanzania, and in southern Tanzania. Forests with highest numbers of endemics are: lower Tana River, Arabuko‐Sokoke, Shimba Hills (Kenya); lowland East Usambara, Pugu Hills, Matumbi Hills, Rondo and Litipo and other plateaux near Lindi (Tanzania); the Tanzanian offshore island of Pemba; Bazaruto archipelago (Mozambique), and tiny forest remnants of southern Malawi, eastern Zimbabwe and Mozambique. Most coastal forest endemics have a narrow distributional range, often exhibiting single‐site endemism or with scattered or disjunct distributional patterns. They are best interpreted as relicts and not the result of recent evolution. Relictualization probably started with the separation of the ancient Pan African rainforest into two parts during the Miocene. The coastal forests are interpreted as a ‘vanishing refuge’ with the endemic species gradually becoming more and more relict (and presumably extinct) due historically to climatic desiccation and more recently to human destruction.

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