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Conservation challenges in a threatened hotspot: agriculture and plant biodiversity losses in Baja California, Mexico

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Abstract

Modern agricultural practices pose serious threats to biodiversity worldwide. Species losses from habitat conversion are well documented, but indirect impacts such as reduced water availability to adjacent ecosystems are less known. San Quintín is an important agricultural valley in the mediterranean climate region of Baja California, Mexico. The region is also a hotspot of plant species richness and endemism. Plant species in the region are here analyzed by comparison of the contemporary flora to historical botanical collections to identify extirpations. Historical collections indicate that habitat loss to agriculture has been a direct cause of species losses. As importantly, the unsustainable extraction of groundwater has apparently led to salt water intrusion, resulting in the loss of 22 native plant taxa, including 13 rare plants. Seventy-eight percent of all the vernal pool taxa have been lost from the flora (including 85 % of the rare taxa) and 11 % of plants of riparian and pond habitat (including 25 % of the rare taxa) are no longer found in the region. Unsustainable agricultural practices continue to threaten fragile coastal ecosystems and are a serious challenge to current and future conservation efforts. Ironically, these same practices frequently result in abandonment of cultivated areas. Owing to indirect impacts, conservation of biodiversity and large-scale agricultural operations are even less compatible on a regional scale than indicated by direct impacts. It is vital that sustainable agricultural practices be adopted locally and globally to avoid further losses of biodiversity.

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Abbreviations

CFP:

California Floristic Province

GSQ:

Greater San Quintín

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Acknowledgments

This work represents part of Vanderplank’s master’s research at Claremont Graduate University and doctoral studies at the University of California, Riverside. Funding was generously provided by The Jiji Foundation. Jon Rebman (San Diego Natural History Museum) generously assisted with plant identifications and access to specimen data. Many people helped with field work, Vanderplank is particularly grateful to Naomi Fraga, Sergio Mata, and Bart O’Brien for their continued support.

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Correspondence to Sula Vanderplank.

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Communicated by David Hawksworth.

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Vanderplank, S., Ezcurra, E., Delgadillo, J. et al. Conservation challenges in a threatened hotspot: agriculture and plant biodiversity losses in Baja California, Mexico. Biodivers Conserv 23, 2173–2182 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-014-0711-9

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