A-Islands: A Vascular Plant Dataset for Biodiversity Research and Species Monitoring on Australian Continental Islands

Schrader J, Coleman D, Abbott I, Bryant S, Buckley R, Crayn DM, Gallagher RV, Harris S, Heatwole H, Jackes B, Kreft H, Mills K, Kirkpatrick J, Latz PK, Neldner J, Sattler C, Visoiu M, Wenk EH, Woinarski JCZ, Worboys S, Wright IJ, Zorn I and Westoby M

Journal of Vegetation Science
https://doi.org/10.1111/jvs.70019

Abstract

Aims

Australia's coastline is fringed by more than 8000 continental islands. These islands feature a diverse array of landforms, rock and soil types and geological origins. Some of these islands are among the least invaded, most pristine habitats in Australia and support high plant diversity. Here, we present a new Australia-wide curated dataset for plant species occurrences on islands.

Results

Combining information from 1349 species lists and floras, A-Islands includes data on > 6500 plant species from 844 islands ranging in size from 18 m2 to 4400 km2, exhibiting different degrees of isolation from the mainland, and spanning all major Australian climate zones. Of these, 251 islands have been repeatedly sampled up to 11 times, making it possible to investigate temporal compositional change. A-Islands is open access and will be continuously updated. Its simple data structure, consisting of three comma-separated files allows easy integration with other Australian and global plant-occurrence databases and can serve as a repository for island research in Australia.

Conclusions

Knowing which species occur on Australia's islands will provide opportunities for future research, including studying changes in biodiversity and species turnover within and among archipelagos, tests of classical island biogeography theory, and as a baseline for ecological monitoring and conservation.

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