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[[File:Orange-breasted Sunbird (Nectarinia violacea).jpg|right|thumb|The [[Orange-breasted Sunbird]] (''Nectarinia violacea'') is exclusively found in [[Fynbos]] vegetation.]]
'''Endemism''' is the [[ecological]] state of being unique to a particular geographic location, such as a specific island, [[Habitat (ecology)|habitat]] type, nation or other defined zone. To be endemic to a place or area means that it is found only in that part of the world and nowhere else. For example, all species of [[lemur]] are endemic to the island of [[Madagascar]]. There are 50 species, all native to the island.
Physical, climatic, and biological factors can contribute to endemism. The [[Orange-breasted Sunbird]] is exclusively found in the [[Fynbos]] vegetation zone of southwestern [[South Africa]].
There are two subcategories of endemism - paleoendemism and neoendemism. Paleoendemism refers to a species that was formerly widespread but is now restricted to a smaller area. Neoendemism refers to a species that has recently arisen such as a species that has diverged and become reproductively isolated, or one that has formed following hybridization and is now classified as a separate species. This is a common process in plants especially those which exhibit [[polyploidy]].
An opposite situation is [[cosmopolitan distribution]].
Endemic types or species are especially likely to develop on islands because of their geographical isolation. This includes remote island groups, such as [[Endemism in the Hawaiian Islands|Hawaii]], the [[Galápagos Islands]], and [[Socotra]]. Endemism can also occur in biologically isolated areas such as the highlands of [[Ethiopia]], or large bodies of water like [[Lake Baikal]].
Endemics can easily become [[endangered]] or [[extinct species|extinct]] because of their restricted habitat and vulnerability to the actions of man, including the [[introduced species|introduction]] of new organisms. There were millions of both [[Bermuda Petrel]]s and "[[Juniperus bermudiana|Bermuda cedars]]" (actually ''junipers'') in [[Bermuda]] when it was settled at the start of the 17th century. By the end of the century, the petrels were thought to be extinct. Cedars, decimated by centuries of shipbuilding, were driven nearly to extinction in the 20th Century by the introduction of a parasite. Both petrels and cedars are very rare today, as are other species endemic or native to Bermuda.
Endemic organisms are not the same as [[indigenous (ecology)|indigenous organisms]] — a species that is indigenous to somewhere may be native to other locations as well. An [[introduced species]], also known as a naturalized or exotic species, is an organism that is not indigenous to a given place or area.
==References==
*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endemism
==External links==
*{{wplink}}