Saturday, February 8, 2014

The Endemic Species of Madagascar


It has been said that about 90 percent of the plants and animals that exist on Madagascar are endemic to that area.  There are over a hundred known species and subspecies of the Lemur alone.   It is known as one of the most abundant bio-diversities (the degree of variation of life) areas known on earth.  The concept of endemism is that island areas such as Madagascar are isolated in their specific geographic location. 

Madagascar is an area of just over 587 square kilometers (or over 226 square miles), or slightly less than twice the size of Arizona.  It is an area that is abundant with rich fauna and flora.  
It was originally settled by Austronesian peoples between 200 BC and 500 AD.   The population has been more prevalent since 1960 when it has increased dramatically from five million to around the current twenty two million in 2012.  Life expectancy in this area is around 59 years.

The diversity of its ecoregions is due to the fact that there is a temperate inland climate, an arid climate in the south and a tropical climate along the coast.  There are six main rain-forest areas in Madagascar, known as the rain-forests of Atsinanana.  This verdant area is said to be over 60 million years old.  Rainfall is usually over 2,000 mm per year through the ecoregion, the parts of the rain-forests.  There are two main ecoregions of Madagascar, the dry deciduous forests and the lowland forests. 

Over time there have been about eight extinct bird species.  Some sub-fossil lemurs (during the late Pleistocene age, approximately 10,000 BC and older), turtle, rodent,  fish and hippopotamus species have also become extinct.   Others to become extinct include the Giant Aye-aye, the Giant Fossa, Hipposideros besaoka, Koala Lemur, Malagasy Aardvark, Malagasy Hippopotamus, and the Large Sloth Lemur. 

Madagascar is an ecologist’s dream, with around 90 percent of animal species and plant life endemic to this area.   The various species of Lemurs include (but are not limited to): Aye-Aye, Bamboo, Black, Black and White Ruffed, Dwarf, Indri, Lepilemur, Mouse, Red-Fronted Brown, Red-Ruffed, Ring-Tailed, Sifaka, and Sportive.  Among the other species, there are approximately 245 endemic species of frogs, over half the world’s population of chameleons (59 species), fifteen endemic species of bats, 105 endemic species of birds, a species called Fossa, which is a relative of the Mongoose.  

The natural cycle of the endemic species of Madagascar, according to Berkeley University, is through a process of dispersal and evolution.   This is their phylogeny, their evolutionary relationship.  It seems to be a scientific handbook of the adaptive nature of sub species, evolving from their main species counterparts.  The geographic area involved is between mostly East Africa and Madagascar.  This has a lot to do with the fact that Madagascar split off from Africa 160 million years ago.  Understanding all these elements in depth will further educate us as to where these species came from and what they are evolving to.





Climate changes and the clearing of forests add significant threats to this diverse ecoregion.  These are but a few of the preceding indicators of a wonderland being neglected and subject to demise.  Extinction of species is usually due to species in-adaptability of its changing environment.  Include the fact that man has added his own technological changes to the environment, those factors become even more serious than they already are.  If ever there was a time to try to save the rain-forests and ecosystem of Madagascar, that time would be now.