Abstract

Few studies document plants in caves. Our field observations of a widespread and seemingly angiosperm-rich cave flora in SW China lead us to test the following hypotheses, 1) SW China caves contain a diverse vascular plant flora, 2) that this is a relic of a largely absent forest type lacking endemic species, and 3) that the light environment plants occupy in caves is not distinct from non-cave habitats. To do so we surveyed 61 caves and used species accumulation curves (SAC) to estimate the total diversity of this flora and used a subsample of 14 caves to characterise the light environment. We used regional floras and existing conservation assessments to evaluate the conservation value of this flora. We used observations on human disturbance within caves to evaluate anthropogenic activities. Four-hundred-and-eighteen vascular plant species were documented with SACs predicting a total diversity of 529–846. Ninety-three percent of the species documented are known karst forest species, 7% are endemic to caves and 81% of the species are angiosperms. We demonstrate that the light environment in caves is distinct to that of terrestrial habitats and that a subset of the flora likely grow in the lowest light levels documented for vascularised plants. Our results suggest that the proportion of species threatened with extinction is like that for the terrestrial habitat and that almost half of the entrance caverns sampled showed signs of human disturbance. We believe that this is the first time that such an extensive sample of cave flora has been undertaken and that such a diverse vascular plant flora has been observed in caves which we predict occurs elsewhere in SE Asia. We argue that the cave flora is an extension of the karst forest understory present prior to catastrophic deforestation in the 20thC. We suggest that within SW China caves serve as both refuges and a valuable source of germplasm for the restoration of karst forest. We also propose that caves represent a distinct habitat for plants that is most similar to that of the forest understory, but distinct with respect to the absence of trees, leaf litter, root mats, higher levels of atmospheric CO2, and lower diurnal and annual variation in temperature and humidity. We highlight tourism, agriculture and the absence of legislated protection of caves as the main current threats to this flora.

Highlights

  • Despite scientists’ long fascination with caves [1] their diversity remains poorly documented, studied and understood with respect to both mineral [2] and biological diversity [3]

  • Using the Gesneriaceae, where all species have been evaluated, as a surrogate we found that of the 43 Gesneriaceae species observed in caves, 56% were assessed as Vulnerable to Critically Endangered, compared to 57% for all habitats in South China [45] (S3 Table)

  • We found that 11% of the cave flora had been evaluated as Vulnerable to Critically Endangered with extinction which we propose as an absolute minimum estimate for the percentage of the cave flora that is threatened with extinction

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Summary

Introduction

Despite scientists’ long fascination with caves [1] their diversity remains poorly documented, studied and understood with respect to both mineral [2] and biological diversity [3]. The few studies that have documented the diversity of plants in caves, have focussed on Europe and the Azores [6,7,8,9,10]. Regional estimates for the USA, Europe and China combined suggest that there are ca 280 thousand terrestrial caves [12,13,14] which projected globally suggests a figure of ca 1.8 million worldwide. Karst and the associated limestone / dolomite comprises ca 14% of the terrestrial area [16], the most extensive coverage of which is in Southeast Asia and southern China [17]. The limestone karst of SE Asia have been proposed as a biodiversity hotspot [3] and one within which caves represent an important source of species discovery [18]

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