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The endemic plants of Mozambique: Diversity and conservation status

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The endemic plants of Mozambique: Diversity and conservation status. / Darbyshire, I.; Timberlake, J.; Osborne, J. et al.
In: PhytoKeys, Vol. 136, No. 2019, 11.12.2019, p. 45-96.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Darbyshire, I, Timberlake, J, Osborne, J, Rokni, S, Matimele, H, Langa, C, Datizua, C, de Sousa, C, Alves, T, Massingue, A, Hadj-Hammou, J, Dhanda, S, Shah, T & Wursten, B 2019, 'The endemic plants of Mozambique: Diversity and conservation status', PhytoKeys, vol. 136, no. 2019, pp. 45-96. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.136.39020

APA

Darbyshire, I., Timberlake, J., Osborne, J., Rokni, S., Matimele, H., Langa, C., Datizua, C., de Sousa, C., Alves, T., Massingue, A., Hadj-Hammou, J., Dhanda, S., Shah, T., & Wursten, B. (2019). The endemic plants of Mozambique: Diversity and conservation status. PhytoKeys, 136(2019), 45-96. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.136.39020

Vancouver

Darbyshire I, Timberlake J, Osborne J, Rokni S, Matimele H, Langa C et al. The endemic plants of Mozambique: Diversity and conservation status. PhytoKeys. 2019 Dec 11;136(2019):45-96. doi: 10.3897/phytokeys.136.39020

Author

Darbyshire, I. ; Timberlake, J. ; Osborne, J. et al. / The endemic plants of Mozambique : Diversity and conservation status. In: PhytoKeys. 2019 ; Vol. 136, No. 2019. pp. 45-96.

Bibtex

@article{91f143c50faa4cefbad54696bb916e94,
title = "The endemic plants of Mozambique: Diversity and conservation status",
abstract = "An annotated checklist of the 271 strict-endemic taxa (235 species) and 387 near-endemic taxa (337 species) of vascular plants in Mozambique is provided. Together, these taxa constitute c. 9.3% of the total currently known flora of Mozambique and include five strict-endemic genera (Baptorhachis, Emicocarpus, Gyrodoma, Icuria and Micklethwaitia) and two near-endemic genera (Triceratella and Oligophyton). The mean year of first publication of these taxa is 1959, with a marked increase in description noted following the onset of the two major regional floristic programmes, the “Flora of Tropical East Africa” and “Flora Zambesiaca”, and an associated increase in botanical collecting effort. New taxa from Mozambique continue to be described at a significant rate, with 20 novelties described in 2018. Important plant families for endemic and near-endemic taxa include Fabaceae, Rubiaceae and Euphorbiaceae s.s. There is a high congruence between species-rich plant families and endemism with the notable exceptions of the Poaceae, which is the second-most species rich plant family, but outside of the top ten families in terms of endemism, and the Euphorbiaceae, which is the seventh-most species rich plant family, but third in terms of endemism. A wide range of life-forms are represented in the endemic and near-endemic flora, with 49% being herbaceous or having herbaceous forms and 55% being woody or having woody forms. Manica Province is by far the richest locality for near-endemic taxa, highlighting the importance of the cross-border Chimanimani-Nyanga (Manica) Highlands shared with Zimbabwe. A total of 69% of taxa can be assigned to one of four cross-border Centres of Endemism: the Rovuma Centre, the Maputaland Centre sensu lato, and the two mountain blocks, Chimanimani-Nyanga and Mulanje-Namuli-Ribaue. Approximately 50% of taxa have been assessed for their extinction risk and, of these, just over half are globally threatened (57% for strict-endemics), with a further 10% (17% for strict-endemics) currently considered to be Data Deficient, highlighting the urgent need for targeted conservation of Mozambique{\textquoteright}s unique flora. This dataset will be a key resource for ongoing efforts to identify “Important Plant Areas – IPAs” in Mozambique, and to promote the conservation and sustainable management of these critical sites and species, thus enabling Mozambique to meet its commitments under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).",
keywords = "centre of endemism, checklist, conservation, flora, herbarium, IUCN Red List, range-restricted",
author = "I. Darbyshire and J. Timberlake and J. Osborne and S. Rokni and H. Matimele and C. Langa and C. Datizua and {de Sousa}, C. and T. Alves and A. Massingue and J. Hadj-Hammou and S. Dhanda and T. Shah and B. Wursten",
year = "2019",
month = dec,
day = "11",
doi = "10.3897/phytokeys.136.39020",
language = "English",
volume = "136",
pages = "45--96",
journal = "PhytoKeys",
number = "2019",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The endemic plants of Mozambique

T2 - Diversity and conservation status

AU - Darbyshire, I.

AU - Timberlake, J.

AU - Osborne, J.

AU - Rokni, S.

AU - Matimele, H.

AU - Langa, C.

AU - Datizua, C.

AU - de Sousa, C.

AU - Alves, T.

AU - Massingue, A.

AU - Hadj-Hammou, J.

AU - Dhanda, S.

AU - Shah, T.

AU - Wursten, B.

PY - 2019/12/11

Y1 - 2019/12/11

N2 - An annotated checklist of the 271 strict-endemic taxa (235 species) and 387 near-endemic taxa (337 species) of vascular plants in Mozambique is provided. Together, these taxa constitute c. 9.3% of the total currently known flora of Mozambique and include five strict-endemic genera (Baptorhachis, Emicocarpus, Gyrodoma, Icuria and Micklethwaitia) and two near-endemic genera (Triceratella and Oligophyton). The mean year of first publication of these taxa is 1959, with a marked increase in description noted following the onset of the two major regional floristic programmes, the “Flora of Tropical East Africa” and “Flora Zambesiaca”, and an associated increase in botanical collecting effort. New taxa from Mozambique continue to be described at a significant rate, with 20 novelties described in 2018. Important plant families for endemic and near-endemic taxa include Fabaceae, Rubiaceae and Euphorbiaceae s.s. There is a high congruence between species-rich plant families and endemism with the notable exceptions of the Poaceae, which is the second-most species rich plant family, but outside of the top ten families in terms of endemism, and the Euphorbiaceae, which is the seventh-most species rich plant family, but third in terms of endemism. A wide range of life-forms are represented in the endemic and near-endemic flora, with 49% being herbaceous or having herbaceous forms and 55% being woody or having woody forms. Manica Province is by far the richest locality for near-endemic taxa, highlighting the importance of the cross-border Chimanimani-Nyanga (Manica) Highlands shared with Zimbabwe. A total of 69% of taxa can be assigned to one of four cross-border Centres of Endemism: the Rovuma Centre, the Maputaland Centre sensu lato, and the two mountain blocks, Chimanimani-Nyanga and Mulanje-Namuli-Ribaue. Approximately 50% of taxa have been assessed for their extinction risk and, of these, just over half are globally threatened (57% for strict-endemics), with a further 10% (17% for strict-endemics) currently considered to be Data Deficient, highlighting the urgent need for targeted conservation of Mozambique’s unique flora. This dataset will be a key resource for ongoing efforts to identify “Important Plant Areas – IPAs” in Mozambique, and to promote the conservation and sustainable management of these critical sites and species, thus enabling Mozambique to meet its commitments under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).

AB - An annotated checklist of the 271 strict-endemic taxa (235 species) and 387 near-endemic taxa (337 species) of vascular plants in Mozambique is provided. Together, these taxa constitute c. 9.3% of the total currently known flora of Mozambique and include five strict-endemic genera (Baptorhachis, Emicocarpus, Gyrodoma, Icuria and Micklethwaitia) and two near-endemic genera (Triceratella and Oligophyton). The mean year of first publication of these taxa is 1959, with a marked increase in description noted following the onset of the two major regional floristic programmes, the “Flora of Tropical East Africa” and “Flora Zambesiaca”, and an associated increase in botanical collecting effort. New taxa from Mozambique continue to be described at a significant rate, with 20 novelties described in 2018. Important plant families for endemic and near-endemic taxa include Fabaceae, Rubiaceae and Euphorbiaceae s.s. There is a high congruence between species-rich plant families and endemism with the notable exceptions of the Poaceae, which is the second-most species rich plant family, but outside of the top ten families in terms of endemism, and the Euphorbiaceae, which is the seventh-most species rich plant family, but third in terms of endemism. A wide range of life-forms are represented in the endemic and near-endemic flora, with 49% being herbaceous or having herbaceous forms and 55% being woody or having woody forms. Manica Province is by far the richest locality for near-endemic taxa, highlighting the importance of the cross-border Chimanimani-Nyanga (Manica) Highlands shared with Zimbabwe. A total of 69% of taxa can be assigned to one of four cross-border Centres of Endemism: the Rovuma Centre, the Maputaland Centre sensu lato, and the two mountain blocks, Chimanimani-Nyanga and Mulanje-Namuli-Ribaue. Approximately 50% of taxa have been assessed for their extinction risk and, of these, just over half are globally threatened (57% for strict-endemics), with a further 10% (17% for strict-endemics) currently considered to be Data Deficient, highlighting the urgent need for targeted conservation of Mozambique’s unique flora. This dataset will be a key resource for ongoing efforts to identify “Important Plant Areas – IPAs” in Mozambique, and to promote the conservation and sustainable management of these critical sites and species, thus enabling Mozambique to meet its commitments under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).

KW - centre of endemism

KW - checklist

KW - conservation

KW - flora

KW - herbarium

KW - IUCN Red List

KW - range-restricted

U2 - 10.3897/phytokeys.136.39020

DO - 10.3897/phytokeys.136.39020

M3 - Journal article

VL - 136

SP - 45

EP - 96

JO - PhytoKeys

JF - PhytoKeys

IS - 2019

ER -