Abstract

AbstractAimTo assess the relative contributions of colonization, speciation and human activities on species richness (S) of mammalian communities among oceanic islands.LocationPalaeo‐islands world‐wide.MethodsWe compiled species lists from published works and compared species–area and species–isolation relationships for mammalian taxa of 36 islands over three stages of community development during the late Pleistocene and Holocene: at colonization, or founding (Sf); after in situ speciation, but before colonization by humans (Ss); and during the Anthropocene (SA), that is, following human colonization and subsequent extinctions and species introductions. We used regression and correlation analyses to compare Sf and Ss patterns to assess the impact of speciation on the native assemblages, and compared these patterns to those expected by island biogeography theory (largely based on patterns for extant insular faunas). We then compared patterns for Ss and SA to assess impacts of human activities on insular community structure.ResultsAlthough patterns for Sf were consistent with those expected based on island biogeography theory (Sf increasing with area and decreasing with isolation), patterns for Ss were quite anomalous, with uncharacteristically steep log‐log slopes (high z‐values) of the species–area relationship, and no significant influence of isolation on Ss. Analyses based on contemporary assemblages (SA) indicated that human activities have rendered native assemblages highly depauperate, while anthropogenic introductions have inflated richness far above Ss on all but the largest islands.Main conclusionsLong‐standing models of island biogeography may prove inadequate unless their conceptual domains are expanded to include the effects of all three fundamental, biogeographical processes (immigration, extinction and speciation), the impact of human activities on each of these processes, and the likelihood that, at least for very large and isolated islands, a long‐term equilibrium among these processes is seldom achieved.

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