Skip to main content

page search

Library Assessing the conservation value of a human-dominated island landscape: Plant diversity in Hawaii

Assessing the conservation value of a human-dominated island landscape: Plant diversity in Hawaii

Assessing the conservation value of a human-dominated island landscape: Plant diversity in Hawaii

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2008
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201300910199
Pages
1765-1781

The conversion of native habitats to pasture and other working lands, unbuilt lands modified by humans for production, is one of the greatest threats to biodiversity. While some human-dominated landscapes on continents support relatively high native biodiversity, this capacity is little studied in oceanic island systems characterized by high endemism and vulnerability to invasion. Using Hawaii as a case study, we assessed the conservation value of working landscapes on an oceanic island by surveying native and non-native plant diversity in mature native forest and in the three dominant land covers/uses to which it has been converted: native, Acacia koa timber plantations, wooded pasture, and open pasture. As expected, native plant diversity (richness and abundance) was significantly higher and non-native abundance significantly lower in mature native forests than any other site type. A. koa plantations and wooded pasture supported four and three times greater, respectively, species richness of native understory plants than open pasture. Also, A. koa plantations and wooded pasture supported similar species communities with about 75% species in common. Conservation and restoration of mature native forest in Hawaii is essential for the protection of native, rare species and limiting the spread of non-native species. A. koa plantations and wooded pasture, however, may help harmonize production and conservation by supporting livelihoods, more biodiversity than open pasture, and some connectivity between native forest remnants important for sustaining landscape-level conservation value into the future.

Share on RLBI navigator
NO

Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Goldman, Rebecca L.
Pejchar Goldstein, Liba
Daily, Gretchen C.

Publisher(s)
Data Provider