Persistent Identifier
|
doi:10.23708/CDFYZ7 |
Publication Date
|
2025-09-24 |
Title
| Resurvey of 182 subpopulations of 28 threatened endemic tree species on Reunion Island |
Author
| Pouteau, Robin (UMR AMAP - CIRAD, CNRS, INRAE, IRD, Univ.Montpellier - France) - ORCID: 0000-0003-3090-6551
Adrien, Elise (IRD - Institut de Recherche pour le Développement)
Ah-Peng, Claudine (Université de La Réunion) - ORCID: 0009-0008-9208-514X
Albert, Sébastien (Université de Lorraine) - ORCID: 0000-0002-4070-2117
Flores, Olivier (Université de La Réunion) - ORCID: 0000-0002-1416-0449
Laforgue, Bastian (UMR AMAP - CIRAD, CNRS, INRAE, IRD, Univ.Montpellier - France)
Lavergne, Christophe (Conservatoire Botanique National de Mascarin (CBN-CPIE Mascarin), La Réunion) - ORCID: 0009-0002-2073-272X
Meyer, Jean-Yves (Gouvernement de Polynésie française, Polynésie Française) - ORCID: 0000-0001-7968-9944
Regen, Anaëlle (IRD - Institut de Recherche pour le Développement)
Rojat, Margaux (UMR AMAP - CIRAD, CNRS, INRAE, IRD, Univ.Montpellier - France)
Roussel, Sarah (Conservatoire Botanique National de Mascarin (CBN-CPIE Mascarin), La Réunion) |
Point of Contact
|
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POUTEAU, Robin (UMR AMAP - CIRAD, CNRS, INRAE, IRD, Univ.Montpellier - France) |
Description
| This dataset focuses on 28 threatened woody taxa endemic to the Mascarene Islands, including 10 taxa strictly endemic to Reunion. These taxa account for 53 % of all threatened shrubs and trees endemic to the archipelago and still occurring on Reunion Island. Thirteen threatened endemic tree taxa are categorised as critically endangered (CR), nine as endangered (EN) and six as vulnerable (VU). A total of 182 subpopulations were resurveyed in 109 sites. Each site hosted from one to six threatened endemic tree taxa. Historical records were botanical relevés dating from 1998 to 2018 with data on numbers of juvenile (in the broad sense, i.e., including juveniles in the strict sense, seedlings and saplings) and adult (i.e., mature) threatened endemic trees compiled in conservation master plans and national action plans. Each site was resurveyed in 2023-2024 and the current numbers of adult and juvenile threatened endemic trees were recorded in a circular area of 2,500 m² (radius of 28 m). At each site, we estimated the temporal trend of adult and juvenile threatened endemic trees as the difference between the current and the historical numbers of individuals divided by the number of years since the historical census to account for their different dates. A positive value indicates an increasing subpopulation size, zero indicates a stable subpopulation and a negative value indicates a decreasing subpopulation. A concentric quadrat of 100 m² was set up and the number of invasive alien plants in the upper vegetation layer, i.e., with a diameter at breast height (DBH) ≥ 1 cm, was counted. Five quadrats of 1 m² positioned at each corner of the 100 m² quadrat and in its centre were used to count the number of invasive alien plants with a DBH < 1 cm in the understory layer (including juveniles of woody invasive alien plants). For clonal plants, we enumerated the number of ramets. The abundance of IAPs with a DBH < 1 cm in the five quadrats of 1 m² was extrapolated to 100 m². The taxonomical referential of the vascular flora of Reunion was used to check the biogeographical and invasive status of each taxon. Three functional traits and the IUCN Red List category of extinction risk were assigned to each threatened endemic tree taxa. The three traits are those of the leaf–height–seed plant ecology strategy scheme: i) the mean SLA, i.e., the amount of light-capturing surface area that is deployed with a given investment of dry mass, which expresses the fundamental acquisition–conservation trade-off; ii) the maximum plant height, which reflects a trade-off for biophysical constraints in determining water fluxes within the plant and which is related to its competitive ability ; and iii) the mean seed mass, which reflects variation in dispersal capability and seedling survivorship. These traits were retrieved from the recently established TREFL database (Adrien et al., 2025). Seed mass was lacking for two threatened endemic tree taxa in the current version of the database. Seed mass of Dombeya blattiolens (Malvaceae) was considered the same as that of the closely-related D. ficulnea (3.2 mg). Seed mass of Pyrostria commersonii (Rubiaceae) was considered the same as that of P. bibracteata (39.2 mg), a congeneric taxon distributed across islands of the South-West Indian Ocean. SLA was missing for Hernandia mascarenensis. The annual rainfall and elevation of each site were also indicated. (2025-09-24) |
Subject
| Earth and Environmental Sciences |
Keyword
| Extinction
Invasive alien plant
Population trend
Survival |
Scientific Theme
| Ecosystems and natural habitat (NumeriSud) https://uri.ird.fr/so/kos/tnu/082
Plant sciences (NumeriSud) https://uri.ird.fr/so/kos/tnu/076 |
Related Publication
| Robin Pouteau, Élise Adrien, Claudine Ah-Peng, Sébastien Albert, Olivier Flores, Bastian Laforgue, Christophe Lavergne, Jean-Yves Meyer, Anaëlle Regen, Margaux Rojat, Sarah Roussel (2025) Increased juvenile mortality in threatened endemic trees following alien plant invasion in the forest understory of a tropical oceanic island. Biological Conservation [under review]. |
Language
| English |
Production Date
| 2025-09-24 |
Production Location
| Reunion, Réunion |
Funding Information
| ANR: ANR-22-CE32-0006 |
Distribution Date
| 2025-09-24 |
Depositor
| POUTEAU, Robin |
Deposit Date
| 2025-09-24 |
Time Period
| Start Date: 2025-09-24 |
Date of Collection
| Start Date: 2023-09-01 ; End Date: 2024-07-31 |
Data Type
| Survey data |