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/ Technology News / 2008 / April 2008 / April 16, 2008 Scientists find evidence that could rewrite Hawaiis botanical history |
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The discovery that one of Hawaiis most dominant plants, Metrosideros, has been a resident of the islands far longer than previously believed, might change the states botanical history.
Washington, April 16 : The discovery that one of Hawaii's most dominant plants, Metrosideros, has been a resident of the islands far longer than previously believed, might change the state's botanical history.
Scientists at the Smithsonian Institution in the US collected the data that lead to this discovery.
Metrosideros, commonly called "ohi'a" in the Hawaiian Islands, has puzzled researchers for years. Although previously thought to be a newcomer to the islands, these plants are well integrated into the islands' ecosystems.
However, scientists from the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History and the Smithsonian's National Zoo now are able to show, through molecular research, that Metrosideros may have colonized the islands soon after they formed.
If so, these plants would have played an important role in shaping the ecology of the islands from the beginning.
The isolated Hawaiian Islands are home to many unique and endemic species of plants and animals.
To know how these species came to interact with one another and form functioning ecosystems, scientists must first know how and when each species came to be on the islands.
This is particularly important in the case of Metrosideros-many species of birds and insects are specialized to coexist and feed on these plants.
Knowing when Metrosideros dispersed and colonized the islands also will give scientists a better understanding of how and when the fauna that rely on them evolved.
Until now, no definitive study has been done on ecologically dominant species in this island group.
According to Scott Miller, a Smithsonian scientist working on the project, "What we are finding is a distinct geographical pattern that supports a hypothesis that these plants colonized the Hawaiian Islands sequentially as they formed."
"This could prove that Metrosideros played a far more important role in Hawaii's ecology than once thought," he added.
Scientists at the Smithsonian plan to continue researching Metrosideros in Hawaii to further determine the plant's historical colonization pattern and its influence and role in the biodiversity of the islands.
ANI