Is geographical rarity frequent among the cacti of the Chihuahuan Desert?

Authors

  • Héctor M Hernández
  • Carlos Gómez-Hinostrosa
  • Gibrán Hoffmann

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22201/ib.20078706e.2010.001.186

Keywords:

areas of occupancy, cacti, Chihuahuan Desert, distribution size, Mexico, IUCN Red List

Abstract

With the aim of assessing the extent of geographical rarity of Mexican Cactaceae, we calculated the distribution size (area of occupancy) of 142 species from the Chihuahuan Desert. In addition, using 2 variables (number of localities and range size), we preliminarily assessed their conservation status using the current IUCN Red List criteria. The results showed enormous variation in the areas of occupancy, although from the biogeographic and conservation perspective the most exceptional group comprises the extremely narrow endemics (42 species), whose range is restricted to areas smaller than 10 km2. Our results reinforce the reputation of this plant family as exceptionally rare geographically. We suggest that geographical rarity of Cactaceae in the Chihuahuan Desert is a natural phenomenon; however, we propose that the range of several species has been infl uenced by human activities. Regarding the conservation status of the species, 75 of them are categorized as Least concern. The remaining 67 species (47.2%) fall in 1 of the 3 categories of threat (27 Vulnerable, 11 Endangered, and 29 Critically endangered). These fi gures confi rm the critical conservation status of Mexican Cactaceae.

Published

2010-04-01

Issue

Section

BIOGEOGRAFÍA