Vanschoenwinkel Bram, de Paula Luiza F A, Snoeks Joren M, Van der Stocken Tom, Buschke Falko T, Porembski Stefan, Silveira Fernando A O
Community Ecology Lab, bDIV Research Group, Department of Biology, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Pleinlaan 2, Brussels, 1050, Belgium.
Center for Environmental Management, University of the Free State, Park West PO Box 339, Bloemfontein, 9301, South Africa.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2025 Apr;100(2):481-507. doi: 10.1111/brv.13150. Epub 2024 Oct 1.
Islands are fundamental model systems in ecology, biogeography, and evolutionary biology. However, terrestrial islands, unlike their aquatic counterparts, have received comparatively less attention. Among these land islands, inselbergs (i.e. isolated rock outcrops with diverse lithologies and a modest topographical prominence) stand out as iconic examples distributed worldwide across global biomes. Due to their durable lithology, inselbergs change slowly, persisting for tens of millions of years. In this review, we propose a biological definition for inselbergs that captures three fundamental characteristics of inselbergs from the perspective of biota. These are old age, isolation and the presence of unique microhabitats that are rare or absent in the surrounding matrix, fostering distinct communities often with unique and endemic biota. We synthesise the state of the art and formulate a set of testable hypotheses to deepen our understanding of the origins and maintenance of diversity on inselbergs, which are increasingly exposed to anthropogenic threats. By offering different habitats compared to the surrounding habitat matrix (e.g. moist microhabitats in dryland landscapes and xeric environments in humid tropical landscapes), inselbergs may allow specific lineages to thrive beyond their typical geographical limits. Particularly in drylands and degraded landscapes, inselbergs may not just provide different habitats but also act as ecological refuges or evolutionary refugia by providing a wider range of potential microhabitats than the surrounding matrix, enhancing resilience and promoting regional biodiversity. The central role of the matrix ensures that the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of inselbergs differ from those of true islands such as oceanic islands. Given that inselberg biota coexist within a terrestrial matrix, interactions between inselberg and matrix populations impact each other significantly. Over evolutionary timescales, matrix species may contract to inselberg refugia, preserving lineages while cycles of isolation and reconnection may drive speciation via a species pump. Although inselberg biodiversity has been studied predominantly from an island biogeography perspective, we argue that depending on the spatial scale, habitat specificity and mobility of the organisms considered, a range of different theories and paradigms can help explain the biogeography and local distribution patterns of different taxonomic and functional groups of inselberg species.
岛屿是生态学、生物地理学和进化生物学中的基础模型系统。然而,与水生岛屿不同,陆地岛屿受到的关注相对较少。在这些陆岛中,inselbergs(即具有不同岩性和适度地形突出性的孤立岩石露头)作为标志性例子脱颖而出,分布在全球各地的生物群落中。由于其持久的岩性,inselbergs变化缓慢,能持续数千万年。在本综述中,我们从生物群的角度为inselbergs提出了一个生物学定义,该定义涵盖了inselbergs的三个基本特征。这些特征是年代久远、孤立以及存在周围基质中罕见或不存在的独特微生境,从而形成了通常具有独特和特有生物群的独特群落。我们综合了现有研究状况,并提出了一组可检验的假设,以加深我们对inselbergs上多样性的起源和维持的理解,inselbergs正日益受到人为威胁。与周围的栖息地基质相比,inselbergs提供了不同的栖息地(例如旱地景观中的潮湿微生境和湿润热带景观中的干旱环境),这可能使特定谱系在其典型地理范围之外蓬勃发展。特别是在旱地和退化景观中,inselbergs不仅可能提供不同的栖息地,还可能通过提供比周围基质更广泛的潜在微生境,充当生态避难所或进化避难所,增强恢复力并促进区域生物多样性。基质的核心作用确保了inselbergs的生态和进化动态与海洋岛屿等真正岛屿的生态和进化动态不同。鉴于inselberg生物群存在于陆地基质中,inselberg种群与基质种群之间的相互作用会相互产生重大影响。在进化时间尺度上,基质物种可能收缩到inselberg避难所,保存谱系,而隔离和重新连接的循环可能通过物种泵驱动物种形成。尽管inselberg生物多样性主要是从岛屿生物地理学的角度进行研究的,但我们认为,根据所考虑的生物体的空间尺度、栖息地特异性和流动性,一系列不同的理论和范式可以帮助解释inselberg物种不同分类和功能组的生物地理学和局半分布模式。