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Oceanian realm

The Oceanian realm is one of the eight biogeographic realms and is unique in not including any continental land mass. It has the smallest land area of any of the WWF realms.

Map of Oceanian realm. It extends further east to include Rapa Nui and Sala y Gomez.

This realm includes the islands of the Pacific Ocean in Micronesia, the Fijian Islands, the Hawaiian islands, and Polynesia (with the exception of New Zealand).[1] New Zealand, Australia, and most of Melanesia including New Guinea, Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands, and New Caledonia are included within the Australasian realm.

Conversely, New Guinea, New Caledonia, the Solomon Islands and New Zealand are included in the Oceanian realm in the classification scheme developed by Miklos Udvardy in 1975.[2][3]

The Juan Fernández Islands have been included in both the Oceanian and Temperate South American realms.[4] Despite only being a few hundred miles removed from the South American coast, the islands have strong Hawaiian and southeast Polynesian biogeographic influences, and the presence of an endemic insect and plant family.[4] The uninhabited French territory of Clipperton Island, 1,000 kilometers off the coast of Mexico, has also been associated with the realm.[5][4]

Geology edit

Oceania is geologically the youngest realm. While other realms include old continental land masses or fragments of continents, Oceania is composed mostly of volcanic high islands and coral atolls that arose from the sea in geologically recent times, many of them in the Pleistocene. They were created either by hotspot volcanism, or as island arcs pushed upward by the collision and subduction of tectonic plates. The islands range from tiny islets, sea stacks and coral atolls to large mountainous islands, like Hawaii and Fiji.

Climate edit

The climate of Oceania's islands is tropical or subtropical, and range from humid to seasonally dry. Wetter parts of the islands are covered by tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, while the drier parts of the islands, including the leeward sides of the islands and many of the low coral islands, are covered by tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests and Tropical and subtropical grasslands, savannas, and shrublands. Hawaii's high volcanoes, Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa, are home to some rare tropical montane grasslands and shrublands.

Flora and fauna edit

Since the islands of Oceania were never connected by land to a continent, the flora and fauna of the islands originally reached them from across the ocean (though at the height of the last ice age sea levels were much lower than today and many current seamounts were islands, so some now isolated islands were once less isolated). Once they reached the islands, the ancestors of Oceania's present flora and fauna adapted to life on the islands.

Larger islands with diverse ecological niches encouraged floral and faunal adaptive radiation, whereby multiple species evolved from a common ancestor, each species adapted to a different ecological niche; the various species of Hawaiian honeycreepers (Family Drepanididae) are a classic example. Other adaptations to island ecologies include gigantism, dwarfism, and among birds, loss of flight. Oceania has a number of endemic species; Hawaii in particular is considered a global center of endemism, with its forest ecoregions having one of the highest percentages of endemic plants in the world.

Flora edit

Land plants disperse by several different means. Many plants, mostly ferns and mosses but also some flowering plants, disperse on the wind, relying on tiny spores or feathery seeds that can remain airborne over long distances notably Metrosideros trees from New Zealand spread on the wind across Oceania. Other plants, notably coconut palms and mangroves, produce seeds that can float in salt water over long distances, eventually washing up on distant beaches, and thus Cocos trees are ubiquitous across Oceania. Birds are also an important means of dispersal; some plants produce sticky seeds that are carried on the feet or feathers of birds, and many plants produce fruits with seeds that can pass through the digestive tracts of birds. Pandanus trees are fairly ubiquitous across Oceania.

Botanists generally agree that much of the flora of Oceania is derived from the Malesian Flora of the Malay Peninsula, Indonesia, the Philippines, and New Guinea, with some plants from Australasia and a few from the Americas, particularly in Hawaii. Easter Island has some plants from South America such as the totora reed.

Fauna edit

 
Nene (Branta sandvicensis), a native goose from Hawaii

Dispersal across the ocean is difficult for most land animals, and Oceania has relatively few indigenous land animals compared to other realms. Certain types of animals that are ecologically important on the continental realms, like large land predators and grazing mammals, were entirely absent from the islands of Oceania until humans brought them. Birds are relatively common, including many seabirds and some species of land birds whose ancestors may have been blown out to sea by storms. Some birds evolved into flightless species after their ancestors arrived, including several species of rails. A number of islands have indigenous lizards, including geckoes and skinks, whose ancestors probably arrived on floating rafts of vegetation washed out to sea by storms. With the exception of bats, which live on most of the island groups, there are few if any indigenous non-marine mammals in Oceania.

Impact of settlement edit

Many animal and plant species have been introduced by humans in two main waves.

Malayo-Polynesian settlers brought pigs, dogs, chickens and polynesian rats to many islands; and had spread across the whole of Oceania by 1200 CE. From the seventeenth century onwards European settlers brought other animals, including cats, cattle, horses, small Asian mongoose (Herpestes javanicus), sheep, goats, and the brown rat (Rattus norvegicus). These and other introduced species, in addition to overhunting and deforestation, have dramatically altered the ecology of many of Oceania's islands, pushing many species to extinction or near-extinction, or confining them to small islets uninhabited by humans.

The absence of predator species caused many bird species to lose the instinct to flee from predators and to lay their eggs on the ground, which makes them vulnerable to predators such as cats, dogs, mongooses or rats. The arrival of humans on these island groups often resulted in disruption of the indigenous ecosystems and waves of species extinctions (see Holocene extinction event). Easter Island, the easternmost island in Polynesia, shows evidence of ecosystem collapse, probably caused by human activity, several hundred years ago, which contributed (along with slave raiding and European diseases) to a 99% decline in the human population of the island. The island, once lushly forested, is now mostly windswept grassland. More recently, Guam's native bird and lizard species were decimated after the introduction of the brown tree snake (Boiga irregularis) in the 1940s.

Ecoregions edit

 
Ecoregions of the Oceanian realm. OC0101: Carolines tropical moist forests; OC0102: Central Polynesian tropical moist forests; OC0103: Cook Islands tropical moist forests; OC0104: Eastern Micronesia tropical moist forests; OC0105: Fiji tropical moist forests; OC0106: Hawaiian tropical rainforests; OC0107: Kermadec Islands subtropical moist forests; OC0108: Marquesas tropical moist forests; OC0109: Ogasawara subtropical moist forests; OC0110: Palau tropical moist forests; OC0111: Rapa Nui and Sala-y-Gomez tropical broadleaf forests; OC0112: Samoan tropical moist forests; OC0113: Society Islands tropical moist forests; OC0114: Tongan tropical moist forests; OC0115: Tuamotu tropical moist forests; OC0116: Tubuai tropical moist forests; OC0117: Western Polynesian tropical moist forests; OC0201: Fiji tropical dry forests; OC0202: Hawaiian tropical dry forests; OC0203: Marianas tropical dry forests; OC0203: Yap tropical dry forests; OC0301: Hawaiian tropical high shrublands; OC0302: Hawaiian tropical low shrublands; OC0303: Northwestern Hawaii scrub.
Carolines tropical moist forests Federated States of Micronesia
Central Polynesian tropical moist forests Cook Islands, Jarvis Island, Johnston Atoll, Kiribati, Palmyra Atoll
Cook Islands tropical moist forests Cook Islands
Eastern Micronesia tropical moist forests Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Wake Island
Fiji tropical moist forests Fiji, Wallis and Futuna
Hawaiian tropical rainforests Hawaiʻi
Kermadec Islands subtropical moist forests New Zealand
Marquesas tropical moist forests French Polynesia
Ogasawara subtropical moist forests Bonin Islands (Japan)
Palau tropical moist forests Palau
Rapa Nui and Sala-y-Gomez tropical broadleaf forests Easter Island (Chile)
Samoan tropical moist forests American Samoa, Samoa
Society Islands tropical moist forests French Polynesia
Tongan tropical moist forests Niue, Tonga
Tuamotu tropical moist forests French Polynesia, Pitcairn Islands
Tubuai tropical moist forests French Polynesia
Western Polynesian tropical moist forests Baker Island, Howland Island, Kiribati, Swains Island, Tokelau, Tuvalu

References edit

  1. ^ Olson, D. M., Dinerstein, E., Wikramanayake, E. D., Burgess, N. D., Powell, G. V. N., Underwood, E. C., D'Amico, J. A., Itoua, I., Strand, H. E., Morrison, J. C., Loucks, C. J., Allnutt, T. F., Ricketts, T. H., Kura, Y., Lamoreux, J. F., Wettengel, W. W., Hedao, P., Kassem, K. R. (2001). Terrestrial ecoregions of the world: a new map of life on Earth. Bioscience 51(11):933-938.
  2. ^ Udvardy, M. D. F. (1975). A classification of the biogeographical provinces of the world. IUCN Occasional Paper no. 18. Morges, Switzerland: IUCN.
  3. ^ Udvardy, Miklos D. F. (1975) World Biogeographical Provinces (Map). The CoEvolution Quarterly, Sausalito, California. link.
  4. ^ a b c Udvardy, Miklos D.F. "A Classification of the Biogeographical Provinces of the World" (PDF). UNESCO. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  5. ^ Robertson, D. Ross; Allen, Gerald R. (1996). "Zoogeography of the shorefish fauna of Clipperton Atoll". Repository.si.edu. hdl:10088/19435. Retrieved 2022-01-17.

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The Oceanian realm is one of the eight biogeographic realms and is unique in not including any continental land mass It has the smallest land area of any of the WWF realms Map of Oceanian realm It extends further east to include Rapa Nui and Sala y Gomez This realm includes the islands of the Pacific Ocean in Micronesia the Fijian Islands the Hawaiian islands and Polynesia with the exception of New Zealand 1 New Zealand Australia and most of Melanesia including New Guinea Vanuatu the Solomon Islands and New Caledonia are included within the Australasian realm Conversely New Guinea New Caledonia the Solomon Islands and New Zealand are included in the Oceanian realm in the classification scheme developed by Miklos Udvardy in 1975 2 3 The Juan Fernandez Islands have been included in both the Oceanian and Temperate South American realms 4 Despite only being a few hundred miles removed from the South American coast the islands have strong Hawaiian and southeast Polynesian biogeographic influences and the presence of an endemic insect and plant family 4 The uninhabited French territory of Clipperton Island 1 000 kilometers off the coast of Mexico has also been associated with the realm 5 4 Contents 1 Geology 2 Climate 3 Flora and fauna 3 1 Flora 3 2 Fauna 4 Impact of settlement 5 Ecoregions 6 ReferencesGeology editOceania is geologically the youngest realm While other realms include old continental land masses or fragments of continents Oceania is composed mostly of volcanic high islands and coral atolls that arose from the sea in geologically recent times many of them in the Pleistocene They were created either by hotspot volcanism or as island arcs pushed upward by the collision and subduction of tectonic plates The islands range from tiny islets sea stacks and coral atolls to large mountainous islands like Hawaii and Fiji Climate editThe climate of Oceania s islands is tropical or subtropical and range from humid to seasonally dry Wetter parts of the islands are covered by tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests while the drier parts of the islands including the leeward sides of the islands and many of the low coral islands are covered by tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests and Tropical and subtropical grasslands savannas and shrublands Hawaii s high volcanoes Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa are home to some rare tropical montane grasslands and shrublands Flora and fauna editSince the islands of Oceania were never connected by land to a continent the flora and fauna of the islands originally reached them from across the ocean though at the height of the last ice age sea levels were much lower than today and many current seamounts were islands so some now isolated islands were once less isolated Once they reached the islands the ancestors of Oceania s present flora and fauna adapted to life on the islands Larger islands with diverse ecological niches encouraged floral and faunal adaptive radiation whereby multiple species evolved from a common ancestor each species adapted to a different ecological niche the various species of Hawaiian honeycreepers Family Drepanididae are a classic example Other adaptations to island ecologies include gigantism dwarfism and among birds loss of flight Oceania has a number of endemic species Hawaii in particular is considered a global center of endemism with its forest ecoregions having one of the highest percentages of endemic plants in the world Flora edit Land plants disperse by several different means Many plants mostly ferns and mosses but also some flowering plants disperse on the wind relying on tiny spores or feathery seeds that can remain airborne over long distances notably Metrosideros trees from New Zealand spread on the wind across Oceania Other plants notably coconut palms and mangroves produce seeds that can float in salt water over long distances eventually washing up on distant beaches and thus Cocos trees are ubiquitous across Oceania Birds are also an important means of dispersal some plants produce sticky seeds that are carried on the feet or feathers of birds and many plants produce fruits with seeds that can pass through the digestive tracts of birds Pandanus trees are fairly ubiquitous across Oceania Botanists generally agree that much of the flora of Oceania is derived from the Malesian Flora of the Malay Peninsula Indonesia the Philippines and New Guinea with some plants from Australasia and a few from the Americas particularly in Hawaii Easter Island has some plants from South America such as the totora reed Fauna edit nbsp Nene Branta sandvicensis a native goose from HawaiiDispersal across the ocean is difficult for most land animals and Oceania has relatively few indigenous land animals compared to other realms Certain types of animals that are ecologically important on the continental realms like large land predators and grazing mammals were entirely absent from the islands of Oceania until humans brought them Birds are relatively common including many seabirds and some species of land birds whose ancestors may have been blown out to sea by storms Some birds evolved into flightless species after their ancestors arrived including several species of rails A number of islands have indigenous lizards including geckoes and skinks whose ancestors probably arrived on floating rafts of vegetation washed out to sea by storms With the exception of bats which live on most of the island groups there are few if any indigenous non marine mammals in Oceania Impact of settlement editMany animal and plant species have been introduced by humans in two main waves Malayo Polynesian settlers brought pigs dogs chickens and polynesian rats to many islands and had spread across the whole of Oceania by 1200 CE From the seventeenth century onwards European settlers brought other animals including cats cattle horses small Asian mongoose Herpestes javanicus sheep goats and the brown rat Rattus norvegicus These and other introduced species in addition to overhunting and deforestation have dramatically altered the ecology of many of Oceania s islands pushing many species to extinction or near extinction or confining them to small islets uninhabited by humans The absence of predator species caused many bird species to lose the instinct to flee from predators and to lay their eggs on the ground which makes them vulnerable to predators such as cats dogs mongooses or rats The arrival of humans on these island groups often resulted in disruption of the indigenous ecosystems and waves of species extinctions see Holocene extinction event Easter Island the easternmost island in Polynesia shows evidence of ecosystem collapse probably caused by human activity several hundred years ago which contributed along with slave raiding and European diseases to a 99 decline in the human population of the island The island once lushly forested is now mostly windswept grassland More recently Guam s native bird and lizard species were decimated after the introduction of the brown tree snake Boiga irregularis in the 1940s Ecoregions edit nbsp Ecoregions of the Oceanian realm OC0101 Carolines tropical moist forests OC0102 Central Polynesian tropical moist forests OC0103 Cook Islands tropical moist forests OC0104 Eastern Micronesia tropical moist forests OC0105 Fiji tropical moist forests OC0106 Hawaiian tropical rainforests OC0107 Kermadec Islands subtropical moist forests OC0108 Marquesas tropical moist forests OC0109 Ogasawara subtropical moist forests OC0110 Palau tropical moist forests OC0111 Rapa Nui and Sala y Gomez tropical broadleaf forests OC0112 Samoan tropical moist forests OC0113 Society Islands tropical moist forests OC0114 Tongan tropical moist forests OC0115 Tuamotu tropical moist forests OC0116 Tubuai tropical moist forests OC0117 Western Polynesian tropical moist forests OC0201 Fiji tropical dry forests OC0202 Hawaiian tropical dry forests OC0203 Marianas tropical dry forests OC0203 Yap tropical dry forests OC0301 Hawaiian tropical high shrublands OC0302 Hawaiian tropical low shrublands OC0303 Northwestern Hawaii scrub Oceanian tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests ecoregionsvteCarolines tropical moist forests Federated States of MicronesiaCentral Polynesian tropical moist forests Cook Islands Jarvis Island Johnston Atoll Kiribati Palmyra AtollCook Islands tropical moist forests Cook IslandsEastern Micronesia tropical moist forests Kiribati Marshall Islands Nauru Wake IslandFiji tropical moist forests Fiji Wallis and FutunaHawaiian tropical rainforests HawaiʻiKermadec Islands subtropical moist forests New ZealandMarquesas tropical moist forests French PolynesiaOgasawara subtropical moist forests Bonin Islands Japan Palau tropical moist forests PalauRapa Nui and Sala y Gomez tropical broadleaf forests Easter Island Chile Samoan tropical moist forests American Samoa SamoaSociety Islands tropical moist forests French PolynesiaTongan tropical moist forests Niue TongaTuamotu tropical moist forests French Polynesia Pitcairn IslandsTubuai tropical moist forests French PolynesiaWestern Polynesian tropical moist forests Baker Island Howland Island Kiribati Swains Island Tokelau TuvaluOceanian tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests ecoregionsvteFiji tropical dry forests FijiHawaiian tropical dry forests HawaiʻiMarianas tropical dry forests Guam Northern Mariana IslandsYap tropical dry forests Federated States of MicronesiaOceanian tropical and subtropical grasslands savannas and shrublands ecoregionsvteHawaiian tropical high shrublands HawaiʻiHawaiian tropical low shrublands HawaiʻiNorthwestern Hawaii scrub Hawaiʻi Midway AtollReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oceanian realm Olson D M Dinerstein E Wikramanayake E D Burgess N D Powell G V N Underwood E C D Amico J A Itoua I Strand H E Morrison J C Loucks C J Allnutt T F Ricketts T H Kura Y Lamoreux J F Wettengel W W Hedao P Kassem K R 2001 Terrestrial ecoregions of the world a new map of life on Earth Bioscience 51 11 933 938 Udvardy M D F 1975 A classification of the biogeographical provinces of the world IUCN Occasional Paper no 18 Morges Switzerland IUCN Udvardy Miklos D F 1975 World Biogeographical Provinces Map The CoEvolution Quarterly Sausalito California link a b c Udvardy Miklos D F A Classification of the Biogeographical Provinces of the World PDF UNESCO Retrieved 7 March 2022 Robertson D Ross Allen Gerald R 1996 Zoogeography of the shorefish fauna of Clipperton Atoll Repository si edu hdl 10088 19435 Retrieved 2022 01 17 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oceanian realm amp oldid 1207096064, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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