We found several contrasting geographical patterns in taxonomic richness. Several mainly mountain regions just east of the main divide in western Canterbury, Otago, and Southland are unusually species-rich, but not genus- or family-rich. Conversely, several coastal regions of eastern South Island are unusually genus- and family-rich, but not species-rich. Four geographically distinct groups of regions share relatively species-, genus-, and family-depauperate floras: maritime-influenced regions of Fiordland, the Chatham and subantarctic islands, inland and lowland basins of Otago and Southland, and eastern Otago's block mountains. Various combinations of elevation range, climatic variability, and land area explain 54% to 61% of the variability in richness of species, genera, families, and life-form groups. Mean daily temperature of the coldest month appears the strongest climatic variable at depressing floristic richness, although moderate degrees of continentality of climate increase it.
We conclude that both propositions are supported by the present study. Databases of regional-scale patterns of plant species richness should be useful for selecting mainland islands for ecosystem restoration, estimating ecosystem or guild diversity, and testing the ecological distinctiveness of ecological regions and districts.
Keywords biodiversity; species richness; taxonomic richness; gamma-diversity; environmental diversity
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 2000, Vol. 38: 629-633
0028-825X/00/3804-0629 $7.00 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand 2000
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1282K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)