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Revista de Gestão Costeira Integrada

On-line version ISSN 1646-8872

RGCI vol.14 no.2 Lisboa June 2014

https://doi.org/10.5894/rgci467 

ARTICLE /ARTIGO

Assessing small island prioritisation using species rarity: the tenebrionid beetles of Italy*

Avaliação de Prioridades de Conservação em pequenas ilhas, usando a raridade de espécies: os escaravelhos tenebriónidos de Itália**

 

Simone Fattorini@, I, Leonardo DapportoII

@Corresponding author: simone_fattorini@virgilio.it

IAzorean Biodiversity Group (GBA, CITA-A) and Platform for Enhancing Ecological Research & Sustainability (PEERS), Departamento de Ciências Agrárias, Universidade dos Açores, Rua Capitão João d´Ávila, Pico da Urze, 9700-042, Angra do Heroísmo, Terceira, Azores, Portugal
IICentre for Ecology, Environment and Conservation, Department of Biological and Medical Sciences, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, OX3 0BP, UK

 

 


ABSTRACT

We investigated conservation priorities of Italian small islands on the basis of tenebrionid species (Coleoptera Tenebrionidae) which are insects typically associated with coastal environments. Firstly, we estimated vulnerability of tenebrionid island communities in four different ways using their inter-island distribution, their overall rarity, their biogeographical characterization and the coastal perimeter of the occupied islands. Then, these four sets of vulnerability values were used to rank biotopes using the Biodiversity Conservation Concern index, BCC, which reflects the average rarity score of the species present in a site, and the Biodiversity Conservation Weight index, BCW, which reflects the sum of rarity scores of the same species assemblage. We found that most of the studied islands have been recovered as having some conservation value, but the Tuscan Islands, Ustica, Pantelleria and the Pelagie Islands were found to have highest priority.

Keywords: Conservation Planning; Insects; Island Biogeography; Italy; Mediterranean.


RESUMO

Neste artigo, a Investigação centra-se nas prioridades de Conservação em pequenas ilhas em Itália, com base em estudos de espécies Tenebrionidae (Coleoptera Tenebrionidae), insetos usualmente associados a ambientes costeiros. Em primeiro lugar, estimou se a vulnerabilidade das comunidades Tenebrionidae insulares de quatro formas diferentes: usando a sua distribuição inter-ilha; a sua raridade total; a caracterização biogeográfica; e o perímetro costeiro das ilhas ocupadas. Seguidamente, estas quatros conjuntos de dados de vulnerabilidade, foram usados para ordenar os biótopos de acordo com o Biodiversity Conservation Concern index, BCC, que reflete a raridade média das espécies presentes num sitio e o Biodiversity Conservation Weight index, BCW, que reflete a soma dos valores de raridade para algumas espécies da composição. Conclui-se que muitos estudos em pequenas ilhas são recuperados como tendo algum valor de conservação, mas as ilhas Tuscanas, Ustica, Pantelleria e Pelagie apresentam os mais altos valores de prioridade.

Palavras-Chave: Planeamento e Conservação; Insetos; Biogeografia Insular; Itália; Mediterrâneo.


 

 

1. INTRODUCTION

The Mediterranean basin is occupied by almost 12,000 islands and islets (Arnold, 2008). Most of the Mediterranean islands have an area less than 3 km2; only 162 Mediterranean islands are more than 10 km2 large, 15 have an area over 500 km2, and 9 present an area over 1000 km2 (Morey & Martinez, 2000).

Because of the high “perimeter/area” ratio that characterizes small islands, their environmental diversity tends to be mostly represented by coastal ecosystems. Thus, although small islands occupy only a very small fraction of Earth surface, they may play an important role in conserving coastal ecosystems. Usually, the smaller the island, the higher the proportion of coastal valued and/or threatened ecosystems (Morey & Martinez, 2000). The total area of the Mediterranean islands is about 13% of the sea area, but they have a coastal length of 24,622 km, only 15% less than the mainland coastline.

In an attempt to achieve sustainability of Mediterranean coastal areas, fourteen Contracting Parties of the Barcelona Convention signed the Integrated Costal Zone Management Protocol in 2008, thus recognizing the need for management policies that are based on a holistic viewpoint of the functions that makeup the complex and dynamic nature of interactions in the coastal environment. This Protocol was then ratified by the European Union in 2010. In 2002, the European Parliament and the European Council also adopted a Recommendation on Integrated Coastal Zone Management which stressed the need to cover “the full cycle of information collection, planning, decision-making, management and monitoring of implementation” (http://ec.europa.eu/environment/iczm/home.htm).

As small islands are largely coastal entities of reduced surface, they are areas where the problems of sustainability are exacerbated (see, for example, Saffache & Angelelli, 2010, for a discussion on the Lesser Antilles case) and present therefore the need for a urgent rethinking about their management (Dias et al., 2010). Coastal ecosystems in small islands can be threatened by a number of reasons, including pollution, coastal land occupation by tourist installations, concrete structures and networks of roads, population increase and increase in tourist pressure, resulting in a general landscape degradation and biodiversity loss (Morey & Martinez, 2000). Rising in sea level due to global warming is another important threat for coastal habitats of small islands (see Manne 2013 for a general discussion). With their environment more fragile and vulnerable than that of continental sites of similar areas, Mediterranean small islands should be therefore considered as valued threatened lands, needing special protection (Morey & Martinez, 2000). In terms of biodiversity, small islands host exclusive assortments of species, sometimes including endemic taxa, usually represented by small populations, which enhance their conservation value (Fattorini, 2006a; Whittaker & Fernández-Palacios 2007). Thus, for an integrated management of islands it is essential to know where biodiversity is concentrated and where it is most imperilled, in order to prioritise conservation actions and adopt the most urgent decisions.

The distribution of small islands in the western and eastern sectors of the Mediterranean Basin is uneven. In the Western Mediterranean there are some large islands (the Balearics, Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily) with relatively few small islands (usually associated with the largest ones), whereas in the Eastern Mediterranean there are few large islands but an extraordinary large number of small islands, especially in the Adriatic Sea (near the coast of the former Yugoslavia) and in the Aegean Sea. Placed in the centre of the Mediterranean, the Italian peninsula is at the interface between the Western and the Eastern sectors. Thus, some Italian small islands are placed in the Western Mediterranean, a few other in the Eastern Mediterranean. Moreover, Italian small islands vary greatly in their isolation (distance from the mainland and/or other islands) and geographical position with respect to major island systems and mainland areas which might act as source of species: for example, some islands are closer to the Sardinia-Corsican area and North African coasts than to the Italian peninsular ones. Thus, although not so numerous as those forming the Greek archipelagos, the Italian islands represent a biogeographically very heterogeneous assemblage of areas in most cases under strong human pressure.

Our knowledge of the biodiversity of Italian small islands varies considerably among islands and taxa, so only for the best investigated taxa (such as butterflies, Dennis et al., 2008) and archipelagos (such as the Tuscan Islands or the circum-Sicilian islands. Fattorini, 2009a, 2010a) wide comparisons and cross-taxon biogeographical and conservation analyses are possible. Among the best sampled taxa for which there are a large number of well explored islands, the beetles belonging to the family Tenebrionidae are particularly interesting for the conservation of coastal ecosystems because they represent a conspicuous component of the beetle fauna inhabiting Mediterranean coastal ecosystems in terms of species richness, individual abundance and biomass (Fattorini, 2008a; Fattorini et al., 2012a and references therein).

Taking advantage of a series of previous researches (Fattorini, 2006a, 2008a, 2009a,b, 2011a; Fattorini & Fowles, 2005) we were able to obtain virtually complete tenebrionid species lists for most of the Italian small islands and to use these data in the present paper to investigate conservation priorities. For this, we evaluated tenebrionid species vulnerability and used this information to identify the islands that host the most imperilled tenebrionid communities.

 

2. MATERIAL AND METHODS

We collected presence data on tenebrionid species for 57 Italian small islands (Figure 1). These data were obtained from literature sources (reviewed in Fattorini, 2008, plus data provided in Fattorini, 2009a,b, 2010a, 2011a,b) and personal new records.

 

 

Study islands varied greatly for their size and distance from the mainland. Island geographical characteristics are given in Table 1 whereas their conservation status is given in Table 2. Island area varied from 0.0000249 km2 (a very small islet in the Tuscan Archipelago) to 223.5 km2 (Elba Island) (mean ± SD: 12.185 ± 32.669). Distance to the mainland varied from 0 km (Mount Argentario, a fossil island currently connected to the mainland by three narrow strips of land) to 162 km (Linosa, close to North African coasts) (mean ± SD: 34.307 ± 29.886). Island maximum elevation, which may be considered an indirect measure of habitat diversity, varied from 0 m (for certain very small islands) to 1019 m (Elba island) (mean ± SD: 252.140 ± 290.918).

We considered presence data for 139 native tenebrionid species. Taxonomy followed Löbl & Smetana (2008). Cosmopolitan species, such as Alphitophagus bifasciatus, Gnathocerus cornutus, Latheticus oryzae, Tribolium castaneum, Tribolium confusum, Tenebrio molitor, Tenebrio obscurus, and Alphitobius diaperinus, which are associated with stored food, were not considered.

Islands were ranked on the basis of the vulnerability of their tenebrionid communities using the Biodiversity Conservation Concern (BCC) index (Fattorini, 2006b) and the Biodiversity Conservation Weight (BCW) index (Fattorini et al., 2012b). In the BCC index, species occurring in a given area are classified into categories of endangerment and weighted by the respective vulnerability. The BCC index also combines the vulnerability of each species with total richness to obtain a measure of relative conservation.

 

 

The BCC is calculated as:

where L is the local (island) species richness, a i is the weight assigned to the ith category of vulnerability, αmin is the minimum weight among all species; and αmax is maximum weight among all species. This formulation ensures the index ranges from 0 (all species belonging to the lower conservation category, α1=1) to 1 (all species belonging to the highest endangerment category, αmax). The BCC index has been previously applied to identify priority areas or biotopes for butterflies in Mediterranean islands and European countries (Fattorini, 2006, 2009b; Dapporto & Dennis, 2008), fish in France (Bergerot et al., 2008; Laffaille et al., 2011; Maire et al., 2013), tenebrionids, butterflies, birds and mammals in the Central Apennines (Fattorini, 2010b, c), and arthropods in Azorean forest fragments (Fattorini et al., 2012b).

The BCC index is a ‘relative measure’, which means that it is not sensitive to species richness. This may be an advantage to compare species assemblages with different species richness, but poses some problems. For example, an assemblage with a single species, having this species αmax, would receive the same score as an assemblage with 10 species, all with αmax. Or worse, an assemblage with a single species with αmax has a higher score than an assemblage with 10 species, 9 with αmax and one with αi < αmax. To overcome this problem, Fattorini et al. (2012b) introduced the BCW, which is calculated as follows:

 

 

where S is the total species richness for all sites (all other symbols as for BCC, see above).

To express species vulnerability, we used four different approaches. In a first approach, we weighted species as an inverse function of their distribution. As the most widespread species occurred on 29 islands, species weights were calculated as the number of inhabited islands divided by 29. Using this weighting scheme in the BCC calculation, the most widespread species received an α-value of 1, whereas species occurring in only one island received an α-value of 29. The BCC calculated using this scheme will be referred to as BCC1.

In a second approach, we weighted species using the Kattan index (Kattan, 1992), which is based on species geographical distribution (wide/narrow distribution), habitat specificity (broad/restricted habitat specificity) and abundance (abundant/scarce population) and has been previously used to express species rarity in tenebrionid assemblages (Fattorini, 2008b, 2010b, c, 2013a, b). These three aspects were evaluated using information provided in Aliquò et al. (2006). Geographical distribution was evaluated with reference to the number of Italian administrative mainland regions from which each species is known. Species occurring in less than four regions (<20% of regions) were considered as geographically rare. Species associated with coastal habitats were considered as having restricted habitat specificity. Species reported as scarce by Aliquò et al. (2006) were considered as having scarce populations. Then, an eight-score scale was created that reflected different types of rarity and commonness, and each species was assigned to a score as follow: 1: species that are not rare; 2: scarce species (i.e. species rare for abundance); 3: species with narrow habitat specificity; 4: restricted species (i.e. species rare by range); 5: scarce species with narrow habitat specificity (i.e. species rare for both habitat specificity and abundance); 6: scarce and restricted species (i.e. species rare for both geographical range and abundance); 7: restricted species with narrow habitat specificity (i.e. species rare for both habitat specificity and geographical distribution); 8: restricted and scarce species with narrow habitat specificity (i.e. species rare for geographical distribution, habitat specificity and abundance). This weighting scheme assigns higher importance to geographical rarity which is appropriate for the purpose of our study because species with a narrow geographical distribution are more vulnerable at a global or regional level (e.g. endemics) (Kattan, 1992). Using this weighting scheme in the BCC calculation, species common for all rarity measures received an a-value of 1, whereas species rare for all three aspects received an a-value of 8. The BCC calculated using this scheme will be referred to as BCC2.

In a third approach, we strictly focused on the type of distribution shown by species. For this, we divided the species into the following categories: species endemic to single islands (SIE); species endemic to an archipelago (END); species occurring on one or more of the study islands, but not on the Italian mainland or major islands (Sardinia and Sicily), which is the case of species occurring on the African on Greek coasts (NIT); species occurring on the Italian mainland or major islands with highly fragmented distribution (FRG); species that are widespread on the Italian mainland (WID). For the calculation of the BCC index, the following arrangement of weights was used: SIE (α= 16), END (α= 8), NIT (α= 4), FRG (α= 2), WID (α= 1). In this case, weights followed a geometric series to take into account various sources of incertitude (see Fattorini, 2006a). In general, it is unlikely that species found only on islands will be later found also on mainland areas and endemics are obviously an important conservation target in island conservation; moreover, single island endemics are much more valued than species which occur on more than one island. A the other extreme, the assignment of a species to the FRG category may be problematic, because it is difficult to establish if a fragmented distribution reflects a true state of affairs or is due to the lack of knowledge, thus species with an assumed fragmented distribution have a score only slightly superior to that of widespread species. Finally, the intermediate weight assigned to the NIT category is due to the fact that species occurring on Italian islands, but not on other Italian areas, are of high conservation value from a national perspective, even if they may be largely distributed in other countries. This criterion is similar to the IUCN procedure for regional red list assessments (http://www.iucnredlist.org/documents/reg_guidelines_en.pdf). The BCC calculated using this scheme will be referred to as BCC3.

Finally, as a forth criterion, we calculated species rarity using the perimeter of the inhabited islands. In the BCC1 index, we calculated species rarity on the basis of the number of occupied islands. However, the islands included in our analysis have enormous differences in size, so a species living exclusively in a very small island should be considered much rarer than another living in a large island. To explore this form of rarity, we expressed species rarity as the inverse of the summed perimeter of the islands where the species lives. The rationale for using island’s perimeter is due to the prevailing habitat type, i.e. coastal areas, whose extension should be more related with perimeter than area. Because this index is intimately related with the BCC1, but uses island perimeter instead of island number, we called it BCC1p.

The same rarity measures were used to calculate the respective BCW indices, which will be refereed to as BCW1, BCW2, BCW3, and BCW1p, respectively.

To investigate if the four BCC indices are influenced by island geography, we correlated their values with island area, elevation and distance to the closest mainland using a Pearson correlation coefficient. For each BCC index, we considered the islands included in the third quartile of the distribution of BCC values as priority islands. Then, we compared the various indices to assess the percentage of “priority islands” shared by two or more indices. Finally, we used ANOVAs to test if islands selected as priority islands by the four indices showed significant differences in their geographical characteristics, with LSD post hoc tests for pairwise comparisons. The same approach was used for the four BCW indices. Probability levels were set at 0.05 in all tests.

3. RESULTS

Values of BCC1, BCC2, BCC3, and BCC1p are given in Table 3. Values of BCC1 ranged from 0.004 to 0.827 (mean ± SE = 0.149 ± 0.019). Values of BCC2 ranged from 0.000 to 0.952 (mean ± SE = 0.369 ± 0.034), but only one island (Vivara) had a value of zero. Values of BCC3 ranged from 0.000 to 0.644 (mean ± SE = 0.149 ± 0.023), with nine islands having a value of zero. Values of BCC1p ranged from 0.0004 to 0.381 (mean ± SE = 0.020 ± 0.007).

Values of BCW1, BCW2, BCW3, and BCW1p are also given in Table 3. Values of BCW1 ranged from 0.000 to 0.161 (mean ± SE = 0.029 ± 0.005). Values of BCW2 ranged from 0.000 to 0.225 (mean ± SE = 0.047 ± 0.006), but only one island (Vivara) had values of zero. Values of BCW3 ranged from 0.000 to 0.210 (mean ± SE = 0.028 ± 0.005), with nine islands having a value of zero. Values of BCC1p ranged from 0.0002 to 0.3688 (mean ± SE = 0.0264 ± 0.007).

On average, BCC2 attained higher values than BCC1 (paired t-test, t = 6.188, p<0.0001) and BCC3 (t = 14.333, p<0.0001), whereas BCC1 and BCC3 did not show a significant difference in their average values (t = 0.025, p = 0.980). BCC1p showed lower values than BCC1 (t = 2.299, p<0.0001), BCC2 (t = -10.799, p < 0.0001), and BCC3 (t = -5.967, p < 0.0001).

On average, BCW2 attained higher values than BCW1 (t = 6.891, p<0.0001) and BCW3 (t = 4.183, p<0.0001), whereas BCW1 and BCW3 did not show a significant difference in their average values (t = 0.275, p=0.784). BCW1p showed lower values than BCC2 (t = -2.736, p=0.008), but no significant difference was found for comparisons with BCW1 and BCW3 (t = -0.369, p=0.713, and t = -0.258, p = 0.797, respectively).

The four indices, BCC1, BCC2, BCC3, and BCC1p (Table 3), produced different island rankings which reflect the effect of the geographical characteristics of the islands on their faunal composition. The BCC1 index, which was calculated on the basis of species distribution across islands, was positively correlated with island distance to the mainland (r = 0.639, p < 0.001). This indicates that more remote islands have tenebrionid faunas composed by species occurring on few islands. By contrast, both the BCC2 index, which considered species rarity in terms of mainland distribution, habitat specialization and population abundance, and the BCC3 index, which considered species biogeography, were negatively correlated (r = - 0.341, p = 0.009 and r = - 0.375, p = 0.004, respectively) with island maximum elevation, which indicates that islands with higher maximum elevation (which can be considered a surrogate for habitat diversity) host tenebrionid faunas with a lower concentration of vulnerable and endemic species than environmentally less varied islands. Finally, BCC1p was positively correlated with island distance to the mainland (r = 0.366, p = 0.005).

The BCW1 index was significantly correlated with island perimeter (r = 0.621), area (r = 0.536), elevation (r = 0.494) and distance (r = 0.554) (p < 0.0001 in all cases). The BCW2 index was also significantly correlated with island perimeter (r = 0.453, p < 0.0001), area (r = 0.342, p = 0.009), elevation (r = 0.442, p = 0.001) and distance (r = 0.588, p < 0.0001). BCW3 and BCW1p were only correlated with distance (r = 0.588 and r = 0.580, respectively; p < 0.0001 in both cases).

To assess index congruence in identifying priority islands, we compared the islands included in the highest third quartile for each index. Within this quartile, 6 islands (Lampione, Montecristo, Lampedusa, Pantelleria, plus Cerboli and Sparviero at the boundary value of the quartile; 40%) were shared between BCC1 and BCC2; 6 islands (Lampione, Montecristo, La Scola, Cerboli and Sparviero, plus Lampedusa at the quartile boundary level; 40%) were shared between BCC1 and BCC3; and 14 islands (including Lampione, Montecristo, Cerboli, Sparviero; 87.5%) were shared between BCC2 and BCC3. Among the islands included in the BCC1p upper quartile, 10 (62.5%, including Lampione, Montecristo, Lampedusa, La Scola, Cerboli and Sparviero) were shared with BCC1; 5 (33.3%, including Lampione, Montecristo, Lampedusa, Cerboli and Sparviero) with BCC2, and 6 (40%, including Lampione, Montecristo, Lampedusa, La Scola, Cerboli and Sparviero) with BCC3.

Two islands (Lampione and Montecristo) were recovered as high priority islands by all four BCC indices, and two (Cerboli and Sparviero) were at the borderline of the selected cut-off value. Islands falling in the higher third quartile varied significantly among the four indices for their area (ANOVA F = 2.831, p = 0.047), perimeter (F = 3.947, p = 0.013), elevation (F = 5.984, p = 0.001), but not for distance (F=0.703, p = 0.554). LSD tests revealed significant (p < 0.01) differences between BCC1 and all other indices for area, elevation, and perimeter, whereas differences among the other indices were not significant..

As regards the BCW indices, 11 islands (78.5%) were shared in the highest third quartile between BCC1 and BCC2; 10 islands (71.4%) were shared between BCC1 and BCC3; and 9 islands (64.3%) were shared between BCC2 and BCC3. Among the islands included in the BCC1p upper quartile, 8 (57.1%) were shared with BCC1; 4 (28.6%) with BCC2, and 8 (57.1%) with BCC3. Overall, Lampedusa, Lampione, Linosa, Marettimo, Pantelleria, and Ustica were recovered by all four indices; Capraia, Elba, Giglio, and Montecristo, by three indices.

Islands falling in the higher third quartile did not vary significantly among the four indices for their area (ANOVA F = 0.688, p = 0.563), elevation (F = 2.424, p = 0.076), distance (F = 0.022, p = 0.996), or perimeter (F = 1.113, p = 0.352).

 

4. DISCUSSION

The four BCC and BCW indices used in this study produced different island prioritisations, which may be explained by the different species rarity measures used to calculate them and the effect of island geography on species composition. The BCC1 highlighted the conservation importance of very remote, although faunistically poor, islands, a result also supported by the BCW1 index. These remote islands host few species as a consequence of their distance from possible source areas, yet these species have a narrow distribution, occurring on one or few islands. Moreover, as indicated by results achieved using BCC1p and BCW1p indices, the faunas of these islands tend to be also characterised by species that are distributed on islands whose summed perimeter determines high rarity scores. This may appear surprising, because typically the most remote islands are those colonized by animal species with high dispersal power, which are also the most widely distributed among islands and which should have a total distribution with high perimeter. The fact that the most remote islands are usually colonised by widespread species is a common phenomenon and it is at the basis of the nested structure of most island faunas (Dennis et al. 2012; Ulrich et al. 2009). In the case of the tenebrionid beetles inhabiting the Italian small islands, two factors may have contributed to this unexpected pattern. First, tenebrionids tend to be sedentary animals, with low dispersal power, with most of the species found on small islands being flightless (Fattorini, 2002, 2008a, b, 2010a). This led to uncommon colonization events mostly favored by past land bridges and to repeated evolution of endemic forms (usually considered as subspecies), especially on the most isolated islands. Second, some of the most remote and highest priority islands are not exclusively sourced from the Italian peninsula and major islands but received several elements from the nearer North African mainland (Pantelleria, Linosa, Lampione and Lampedusa). Thus, these islands host several North African species that are absent from Italy and, hence, from all other islands. Interestingly, while BCC2 and BCC3 did not correlate with island distance, BCW2 and BCW3 were correlated with island isolation. This is consistent with the fact that endemic species, which have high conservation weights, tend to be more numerous on the most remote islands, thus increasing the BCW2 and BCW3 values for remote islands.

Another important result is the negative relationships of BCC2 and BCC3 with altitude, thus habitat diversity, which can be explained by the ecology of most of the tenebrionid species considered in this study. The BCC2 index included species’ association with coastal environment as a factor of vulnerability in contrast with a broader habitat specificity. Although some low-elevation islands were occupied by forests before human exploitation (e.g. Lampedusa), in general, flat islands tend to be almost entirely occupied by coastal environments, and hence their faunal assemblages are mainly composed of tenebrionid species that were scored as rare for habitat because of their strict association with coastal environments. By contrast, islands with relatively higher elevations tend to be occupied also by non-coastal environments, such as the high Mediterranean maquis. The occurrence on these islands of tenebrionid species not strictly associated with coastal environments determines a decrease in the proportion of tenebrionids scored as rare for habitat in the BCC2 index, which led to a negative relationship between this index and island elevation.

The BCC3 index also had a negative correlation with island elevation. Because this index is based on a biogeographical categorization of species, this result implies that higher islands host species assemblages with a lower proportion of endemic species. This may be due to the fact that while endemic species are always a small number, a higher environmental diversity may promote the presence of many non-endemic species coming from the mainland. Because of the increase in the number of non-endemic species, endemics will represent a lower proportion of the tenebrionid faunas, thus leading to a decrease in the BCC3 index. Interestingly, BCW1 and BCW2 (constructed just to cope with potential over-indexing biases for poorest islands) were positively correlated with elevation. This indicates that the negative correlations found for BCC2 and BCC3 may be due to the fact that environmentally more diverse islands may even have as many or more rare species than the low-elevation islands, but because they also have many common species in certain habitats, the average rarity is lower.

The BCC2 and BCC3 results suggests that islands may be important not only for the presence of several endemic species, but also as ecological refugia for species associated with the particular coastal biotopes that have been deteriorated on more largely populated mainland areas. It should be also noted that BCC indices are not correlated with island area, whereas a positive correlation with island area was found for two BCW indices (BCW1 and BCW2). Lack of correlation with island area, however, is not a bias for the BCC index itself. For example, for the butterflies of the Italian islands the islands showing the highest BCC value were the largest in the sample (Dapporto & Dennis, 2008).

The islands prioritised by the various indices varied significantly in their geographical characteristics. In particular, the set of islands recovered by the BCC1 index had mean geographical characteristics different from those of all other three BCC indices. By contrast, the four BCW indices recovered similar island sets that were not significantly different in their mean values for the geographical characteristics used in this study.

Although the various indices gave different island prioritisations, most of the islands included in the third quartile for two or more of the three indices belong to the same two archipelagos, the Tuscan Islands and the Pelagie Islands (plus two very isolated islands, Pantelleria and Ustica, which do not belong to any archipelago). Except the Aegadian islands of Marettimo (prioritised by BCW1, BCW2, BCW3) and Favignana (prioritised by BCW1 and BCW2, respectively), no island belonging to the other Italian archipelagos (Aeolian, Campane, Pontine, and Tremiti) was prioritised by more than one index.

In spite of their low levels of endemism, the islands of Ustica and Pantelleria have been prioritised by one (Ustica) and two (Pantelleria) BCC indices, and by all BCW indices. Despite Ustica and Pantelleria emerged recently, suggesting that there was not sufficient time for higher endemicity levels to develop, these islands are located quite far from Sicily and mainland areas. This characteristic could have favoured some relatively fast morphological differentiation in some tenebrionid populations. Actually, one endemic taxon (Opatrum validum marcuzzii) is known from Ustica (out of 26 taxa; 3.8%) and two endemic taxa (Heliopathes avarus donatellae and Probaticus cossyrensis) from Pantelleria (out of 23; 8.7%). Only a fraction of the surface of these two islands is protected. The “Riserva naturale orientata Isola di Ustica” covers 204.36 hectares, i.e. 23.76% of Ustica’s area, whereas the “Riserva naturale orientata Isola di Pantelleria” occupies an area of 2626.69 hectares, i.e. about 30% of the island’s area. However, in both islands there is some habitat variability represented by presence of coastal areas, pine woods and maquis. Pantelleria in particular hosts a great mosaic of environmental variability including the Venere lake area, different woods around the Montagna Grande area and traditionally managed agricultural areas.

The Pelagie Islands are remote and very ancient islands. The island of Lampedusa (the largest amongst the Pelagie) shows a relatively rich tenebrionid fauna, including 28 taxa, 4 of which (Erodius audouini destefanii, Pachychila dejeani doderoi, Alphasida puncticollis tirellii, Asida minima; 14.3%) are endemic to this island. This island was included in the third quartile by both BCC1 and BCC2. Lampione, an islet of just 0.03 km2, hosts six tenebrionid taxa, three of which (Alphasida puncticollis moltonii, Tentyria n. sp. and Opatrum validum rottembergi) are endemic to this island, and one (Machlopsis doderoi), endemic to the Pelagie Islands, occurs on Lampedusa and Lampione. Nineteen species are known from Linosa, with no exclusive endemic (although it is not clear if the Tentyria population of this island belongs to an African species or it is an endemic species), but Stenosis brignonei is endemic to Linosa and Lampedusa, and Linosa was included in the first quartile by the BCC1 index and the BCC1p index as well as by all BCW indices. The “Riserva naturale orientata Isola di Lampedusa” covers 369.68 hectares, i.e. about 15% of the island’s area. The “Riserva naturale orientata/integrale Isola di Linosa e Lampione” (266.87 hectares) covers about 49.5% of Linosa (as an oriented nature reserve) and 100% of Lampione (as a strict nature reserve).

As a whole, Pantelleria and the Pelagie Islands host several species, more or less widely distributed in North Africa (especially Algeria and Tunisia), which occur in Europe only on these islands, like Imatismus villosus and Pseudoseriscius griseovestis on Linosa; Pachychila crassicollis cossyrensis and Opatrum validum schlicki on Pantelleria; Pachychila tazmaltensis, Eutagenia aegyptiaca tunisea and Microtelus lethierryi on Lampedusa; Allophylax costatipennis costatipennis on Lampedusa and Linosa; Gonocephalum perplexum on Lampedusa and Pantelleria. Thus, although Pantelleria and the Pelagie islands host few species, as expected because of their very small area and high isolation, their tenebrionid faunas are very peculiar, which leads to a high prioritisation.

All other islands selected by one or more indices belong to the Tuscan Archipelago. The Tuscan Archipelago is composed of seven main islands (Elba, Giglio, Capraia, Pianosa, Montecristo, Gorgona and Giannutri) and several islets located in the Tyrrhenian Sea, between Corsica and the Italian Peninsula. Main islands range from 2.2 km2 (Gorgona) to 223.5 km2 (Elba). The islands differ considerably in terms of their origin and geological features. The island of Gorgona is composed by both sedimentary and ophiolitic rocks. The island of Capraia is volcanic and originated about nine million years ago. The island of Montecristo is entirely granite, as is most of the Island of Giglio. The island of Elba shows a more composite origin, being granite in the western part (where Mount Capanne reaches 1018 m elevation), sedimentary and metamorphic in the central and eastern part (with gneiss and marble rocks) and alluvial (with clay, sandstone, and limestone soils) in the central plains. The island of Pianosa is composed of sedimentary rocks and shell formations. A total of 59 native taxa are known from these islands, 13 of which (22%) are endemic. Out of these 13 endemics, one (Asida gestroi) is classified as species, the others being represented by populations classified as subspecies. The percentage of endemic taxa (single island endemics and taxa endemic to the archipelago) varies considerably among the main islands, ranging from 5.88% (Elba, with two endemic taxa out of 34 taxa) to 55.56% (Montecristo, with 5 endemic taxa out of 9 taxa), whereas the islets have higher levels of endemism (67-100%) but with very few species (1-3 taxa). This is due to the fact that islets are colonised from adjacent islands by taxa that are endemic to the archipelago, but which are widespread within it. It has been suggested that for animals with low mobility (Fattorini, 2010a), islets tend to be colonized by adjacent islands more than by mainland areas, and this is probably the case of the islets surrounding the islands in the Tuscan Archipelago, such as the very small rocks around Elba island.

Levels of endemism can be explained by the paleogeographical history of this archipelago, with the islands which were isolated for longer showing higher levels of endemism (Fattorini, 2009a, b). Most endemics are associated with garrigue and maquis biotopes. Some taxa show an impressive cladogenesis, being represented with populations endemic to individual islands or to groups of a few islands, such as Asida luigionii (with two subspecies, doriai and insularis), the endemic A. gestroi (with the subspecies gestroi, tyrrhena, capraiensis, lanzai, and gardinii), and Opatrum sculpturatum (with the endemic subspecies ilvense, urgonense, capraiense and igiliense). The only endemic taxa likely associated with woodlands are Colpotus strigosus oglasensis and Odocnemis ruffoi osellai.

All islands of the Tuscan Archipelago are part of a National Park and most of their environmentally valuable areas are under strict protection. In particular all the entire island of Montecristo represents a biogenetic reserve established in 1971. Only two peoples live there, both nature reserve keepers. Visitors are highly restricted in yearly number and activities. Also on Gorgona and Pianosa access is regulated, but other islands were subject to high tourism pressures, notably Elba and Giglio. Despite the human population on the Tuscan Islands is relatively small and declining (e.g., de Fabrizio, 2005), there have been important anthropic influences. Serious consequences have been produced by past growth of mass tourism (and partly also of the so-called ecotourism). This has resulted in the rapid degradation of the most fragile natural habitats especially before the establishment of the National Park. The effects have been especially serious on the coastal environments, which became more and more attractive to tourists just because of their increasing rarity. This is the case of the few and scattered sandy shores on Giglio, now completely obliterated by bathing establishments, or, of the small and very isolated beaches, constantly visited by tourists. The psammophilous species Phaleria spp. and Trachyscelis aphodioides are now considered to be extinct on this island as a result of the high anthropic pressure on the beaches. Increasing rarity of well-preserved places led to high pressure from tourists also on the Island of Giannutri. Although most of the footways on this island are currently forbidden, this is not known by most tourists, who reach the island by ferry-boats and concentrate in the few accessible places.

 

5. CONCLUSIONS

Most of the studied islands have been recovered as having some conservation value according to their tenebrionid faunas. No island was found to have a BCC value of zero with BCC1, only one with BCC2 and a few with BCC3. This fits with the high tendency for tenebrionids to have relict populations or to form endemic species and races resulting in virtually all the islands and islets to be considered of some conservation interest. Insular phenomena are know in many other organisms from Italian islands and this resulted in most islands being identified as Natura 2000 sites (see references reported in Table 2). Many islands are also part of National Parks or other types of protected areas at national or regional level. Therefore, virtually all islands are formally regarded as areas of conservation concerns. However, a formal recognition does not automatically imply that concrete measures for conservation are adopted. Because of limitation of funds and the need of urgent actions for the most “valuable” areas, prioritisation may help to allocate founds or enhance concrete conservation actions and appropriate integrated management policies in selected areas. The use of integrated management policies are extremely important in the context of the Italian small islands, because most of them are inhabited and/or used by people and it is necessary to avoid an opposition between economics and environmental sustainability. Results of our analyses of tenebrionid beetles indicate some islands as having highest priorities, which does not mean that other islands are of scarce interest. These include the islands belonging to the Tuscan Archipelago and some Sicilian Islands (Pelagie, Pantelleria and Ustica). Whereas the islands belonging to the Tuscan Archipelago are part of a National Park, Pantelleria, Ustica and the Pelagie Islands are both classified as natural reserves, not as a National park, and one of them (Lampedusa) is under severe anthropic pressure and social contrasts as it is a primary European entry point for migrants, mainly coming from Africa. More attention at national level should be paid in such situation.

 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We would like to acknowledge P. Cardoso, P. Lo Cascio and G. Gardini for their suggestions and corrections.

 

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*Submission: 30 December 2013; Evaluation: 5 February 2014; Reception of revised manuscript: 11 February 2014; Accepted: 13 February 2014; Available on-line: 19 February 2014

**Portuguese Title, Abstract and captions by Helena Calado on behalf of the Journal Editorial Board

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