THE HISTORY OF ENDEMIC FLORA OF ST HELENA: A RELICTUAL SERIES

New Phytol. 1987 Mar;105(3):509-520. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.1987.tb00888.x.

Abstract

When the endemic plant species of St Helena are ordered according to their increasing taxonomic isolation, their corresponding 'sister groups' show a 'relictual series' of increasing geographical disjunction. This is best explained by progressive extinction and evolution in continental areas rather than by particularly high rates of evolutionary change on the island (i.e. the taxonomically isolated endemics are ancient relicts). Few of the supposed trends of oceanic island evolution are convincingly evident in the flora of St Helena. St Helena was formed in the Miocene, and it is likely that the relict genera colonized St Helena from Southern Africa before the wet forest flora in this area largely disappeared as the climate deteriorated from the late Miocene onwards.

Keywords: Endemic plants; St Helena; oceanic islands; palaeoendemism.