Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
The coastal molluscan fauna of the northern Kermadec Islands,
Southwest Pacific Ocean
F. J. Brook*
A total of 358 species of molluscs (excluding pelagic species) is recorded here
from coastal marine habitats around the northern Kermadec Islands. The fauna is
dominated by species that are widely distributed in the tropical western and
central Pacific Ocean. The majority of these are restricted to the tropics and
subtropics, but some range south to temperate latitudes. Sixty-eight species,
comprising 19% of the fauna, are thought to be endemic to the Kermadec Islands.
That group includes several species that have an
in situ fossil record
extending back to the Pleistocene. The fauna also includes a number of
non-endemic species that are restricted to subtropical or subtropical-temperate
latitudes in the southern Pacific Ocean. Some of these are restricted to the
southwestern Pacific, others are shared with subtropical central and eastern
Pacific islands.
The Kermadec Islands' coastal molluscan fauna is depauperate at the
species/genus level in comparison with faunas in the tropical western and
central Pacific Ocean, and is less diverse than the subtropical south Pacific
faunas of Lord Howe, Norfolk and Pitcairn islands. The species composition of
the Kermadec molluscan fauna in part reflects the present-day biogeographic
isolation of the islands, their subtropical location and the small range of
habitat types present. It is also an inheritance of a geological and
paleo-oceanographic history that gave rise to faunal turnover and allopatric
speciation.
Keywords: Kermadec Islands; molluscs; subtropical; biogeography; South
Pacific
(c) Journal of The Royal Society of New Zealand,
Volume 28, Number 2, June 1998, pp 185-233
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (2732K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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