What is the difference between 'endemic' and 'indigenous' species?

by B. N. Sullivan

Saddle Wrasse (Thalassoma duperrey)When I write about the creatures we have come to know, I nearly always identify both their common name, and their scientific name, and of course I tell our readers where the creatures live. In some instances, I may also mention that a creature is 'endemic' to a certain place.

A reader recently asked, "Does endemic mean the same thing as indigenous?"

The answer is, "Not exactly." Let me explain.

When we say that a species is indigenous to a place, we mean simply that it occurs there naturally. It is a native. But a species can be indigenous to a number of places at once.

In contrast, if we say a species is endemic to a place, we mean that it occurs naturally only in that place. It is a native to an exclusive or limited area. It is not widely distributed, and won't be found naturally anywhere else.

Most species inhabit specific areas of the world, but not the whole world. When people think about animals on land, they intuitively know this. They know, for instance, that giraffes exist naturally only in Africa, and that the polar bears live naturally only in the Arctic. They would not expect to see a giraffe wandering around wild near Hudson Bay, nor would they expect to see a polar bear in Kenya. Yet there are many animals that are much more widely distributed than giraffes or polar bears. Think of squirrels -- or rats!

Moorish Idols (Zanclus cornutus)In the sea, it is the same. Some marine animals (and plants) occur naturally only in the Caribbean, or the Mediterranean, or Hawaii, for example. Other species are found in a wider range of places.

Here in Hawaii, we have a high percentage of endemic species, compared to other places in the world. This is true both on land and in the ocean. Because the island chain is so geographically isolated -- separated from other land masses in every direction by thousands of miles of open ocean -- there has been less opportunity for species from elsewhere to wander here spontaneously and establish themselves. Likewise, it has been difficult for many species that have evolved here in Hawaii to make their way to other areas of the world.

The photos on this page show examples of fish species that are found in Hawaiian waters. The first photo on this page shows a fish called the Saddle Wrasse (Thalassoma duperrey) being serviced by a smaller fish called the Hawaiian Cleaner Wrasse (Labroides phthirophagus). Both of these species are endemic to Hawaii. They occur naturally nowhere else in the world. Each has 'cousins' of the same genus in other regions. Some of those cousins look quite similar, but they are not anatomically identical. I took the photo at Puako, Hawaii.

The second photo shows a small squadron of Moorish Idols (Zanclus cornutus). These fish are indigenous to Hawaii -- they occur here naturally -- but they are not endemic. They also occur naturally elsewhere in what is known as the Indo-Pacific region and the tropical eastern Pacific. Indeed, we have seen them and photographed them in quite a number of places. These four were photographed at Honaunau, Hawaii.

Bluestripe Snappers (Lutjanus kasmira)When we speak of an animal's provenance, there is a third category that is important: the introduced species. Introduced species are those that do not occur naturally in a given place. They are brought there -- introduced -- from somewhere else. Sometimes this happens accidentally (as when a caged parakeet escapes), or when an animal hitch-hikes to a new location on a ship or plane, and manages to establish itself there. In other instances, animals are introduced deliberately, for a variety of reasons. Here in Hawaii, for example, there are a number of game birds that were intentionally introduced decades ago for the benefit of sport hunters. Other species were intentionally introduced as a food source.

In the third image on this page are some Bluestripe Snappers (Lutjanus kasmira), photographed at Puako, Hawaii. These fish were intentionally introduced from the Marquesas in the 1950s as a food fish. As so often happens, their introduction had unintended consequences. Some people in Hawaii do fish for them, and we do see them for sale in some fish markets, but they are not exactly prized. Worse, they have proliferated greatly and they compete with other, more valuable fish. It is also believed that they have contributed to the depletion of the population of a particular kind of crab upon which they prey.

So, to review: Endemics are native to, and live naturally, only in one place; indigenous species are native, but may be more widely distributed; introduced species are 'immigrants' of a sort.

13 comments:

  1. So many information i didn't know. Thanks for sharing.

    ReplyDelete
  2. You're welcome, Antigoni. I'm glad you learned something new here.

    Bobbie

    ReplyDelete
  3. That was probably the best explanation I could have heard. Thank you so muhc!

    ReplyDelete
  4. You're very welcome. ;-}

    Bobbie

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thank you! very straightforward and clear! Precisely what I was looking for!

    ReplyDelete
  6. @ Anonymous You're welcome. Glad to know you found the information you were looking for.

    ReplyDelete
  7. thats the one ive been looking for!! its here only in this website....:)))

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thank you for explaining endemic/indigenous. I am from Northern Ontario where the moose is indigenous but spend some of the winter in Grand Cayman where the blue iguana is endemic, the rock iguana is idigenous and the green iguana is introduced (and invasive). The lion fish is also intoduced (from the Pacific via Florida, it is thought) and is becoming a huge inavsive problem on our reefs where it competes unfairly with the indigenous fish. There is a movement to have it selectively hunted by divers and served as food fish as a means of control. Apparently it tastes good. We're going to try it this year.

    ReplyDelete
  9. thank you very much

    ReplyDelete
  10. Exactly what I've been looking for. Thank you for the info. :)

    ReplyDelete
  11. the explanation was very good. i am thank to you!

    ReplyDelete
  12. I need a clarification regarding endemism in Hawaii. I got to identify a spider which was thought to be endemic to Hawaii islands and which probably originated from Indo-malayan region. Now, as the two species, i.e., from India and Hawaii are probably the same, is there a possibility of saying that the species from Hawaii is "not so endemic" ? Please do help me clarify my doubt.

    ReplyDelete

We welcome your comments and invite your questions. Dialogue is a good thing!

Bobbie & Jerry