The Great Escarpment of southern Africa: a new frontier for biodiversity exploration

The biodiversity of the 5,000 km-long Great Escarpment of southern Africa is currently poorly known, despite hosting half of the subcontinent’s centres of plant endemism and to have a rich endemic vertebrate fauna, particularly in the north-west and east. A country-based overview of endemism, data d...

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Main Authors: Clark, V., Barker, N., Mucina, Ladislav
Format: Journal Article
Published: Springer 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43708
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author Clark, V.
Barker, N.
Mucina, Ladislav
author_facet Clark, V.
Barker, N.
Mucina, Ladislav
author_sort Clark, V.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The biodiversity of the 5,000 km-long Great Escarpment of southern Africa is currently poorly known, despite hosting half of the subcontinent’s centres of plant endemism and to have a rich endemic vertebrate fauna, particularly in the north-west and east. A country-based overview of endemism, data deficiencies and conservation challenges is provided, with Angola being the country in most need of Escarpment research and conservation. Given that the Escarpment provides most of the subcontinent’s fresh water, protection and restoration of Escarpment habitat providing such ecological services is urgently required. Key research needs are exhaustive biodiversity surveys, systematic studies to test refugia and migration hypotheses, and the effects of modern climate change. Such research results can then be consolidated into effective conservation planning and co-ordinated international efforts to protect the rich biodiversity of the Escarpment and the ecological services it provides.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-437082017-09-13T15:58:42Z The Great Escarpment of southern Africa: a new frontier for biodiversity exploration Clark, V. Barker, N. Mucina, Ladislav The biodiversity of the 5,000 km-long Great Escarpment of southern Africa is currently poorly known, despite hosting half of the subcontinent’s centres of plant endemism and to have a rich endemic vertebrate fauna, particularly in the north-west and east. A country-based overview of endemism, data deficiencies and conservation challenges is provided, with Angola being the country in most need of Escarpment research and conservation. Given that the Escarpment provides most of the subcontinent’s fresh water, protection and restoration of Escarpment habitat providing such ecological services is urgently required. Key research needs are exhaustive biodiversity surveys, systematic studies to test refugia and migration hypotheses, and the effects of modern climate change. Such research results can then be consolidated into effective conservation planning and co-ordinated international efforts to protect the rich biodiversity of the Escarpment and the ecological services it provides. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43708 10.1007/s10531-011-0103-3 Springer restricted
spellingShingle Clark, V.
Barker, N.
Mucina, Ladislav
The Great Escarpment of southern Africa: a new frontier for biodiversity exploration
title The Great Escarpment of southern Africa: a new frontier for biodiversity exploration
title_full The Great Escarpment of southern Africa: a new frontier for biodiversity exploration
title_fullStr The Great Escarpment of southern Africa: a new frontier for biodiversity exploration
title_full_unstemmed The Great Escarpment of southern Africa: a new frontier for biodiversity exploration
title_short The Great Escarpment of southern Africa: a new frontier for biodiversity exploration
title_sort great escarpment of southern africa: a new frontier for biodiversity exploration
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43708