Abstract

Cape Verde in the Eastern Atlantic is typical of many island groups in supporting a wealth of endemic species both terrestrial and marine. Marine gastropod molluscs of the genus Conus, commonly known as cone snails, occur in coastal tropical waters throughout the globe, but in Cape Verde their endemism reaches its apogee with 53 out of 56 species occurring nowhere else, the majority of which are restricted to single islands and frequently to single bays. However, Cape Verde is rapidly moving to a tourism-based economy with a projected boom in infrastructure development often coincidental with the shallow-water habitat of many range-restricted Conus. The conservation assessment of Conus to standards of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Endangered Species, found that 45.3% of 53 species assessed from Cape Verde are threatened or near-threatened with extinction compared to 7.4% of 579 species in the rest of the world. The only three Conus species globally assessed as Critically Endangered and on the cusp of extinction are all endemic to Cape Verde. Our analysis of Conus species distribution, together with spatial data of coastal protected areas and tourism development zones, identify important areas for future research and new marine protection. Our findings show that endemism with its associated risks for Conus in Cape Verde has worldwide parallels with many non-marine taxa, while our proposed strategy for Conus conservation extends beyond the confines of the country and this taxonomic group.

Highlights

  • Small islands and archipelagos, isolated by distance and ocean currents, support centres of endemism in both terrestrial and marine taxa (Roberts et al, 2002)

  • Species assessed for likely elevation to a ‘threatened’ category are categorised as Near Threatened (NT); those with insufficient data for categorisation are classed as Data Deficient (DD) and species not considered to be at current or imminent threat are categorised as Least Concern (LC)

  • Twelve Cape Verde Conus species are classified as threatened on the Red List of which three attain the highest risk category of Critically Endangered

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Summary

Introduction

Small islands and archipelagos, isolated by distance and ocean currents, support centres of endemism in both terrestrial and marine taxa (Roberts et al, 2002). These endemism ‘hotspots’ are often subject to threats from natural and anthropogenic forces that can have a disproportionate impact on the biodiversity they support (Fordham and Brook, 2010). Cape Verde in the tropical Eastern Atlantic is such a ‘hotspot’ and it is poorly represented by mammals, it is rich in endemic invertebrates including 473 species of arthropod and 140 species of beetle (Triantis et al, 2010), and widely recognised for its endemic plants (Duarte et al, 2008; Romeiras et al, 2016) and reptiles (Vasconcelos et al, 2013).

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