Cape Floristic Region 
 
 
Unique Biodiversity 
DIVERSITY & ENDEMISM

Taxonomic Group Species Endemic Species Percent Endemism
Plants 9,000 6,210 69.0
Mammals 91 4 4.4
Birds 323 6 1.9
Reptiles 100 22 22.0
Amphibians 46 16 34.8
Freshwater Fishes 34 14 41.2

PLANTS

The Cape Floristic Region is home to the greatest non-tropical concentration of higher plant species in the world, with 9,000 species crammed into its small extent. Incredibly, more than 6,200 (69 percent) of these species are found nowhere else in the world. Furthermore, five of South Africa's 12 endemic plant families and 160 endemic genera are found only in this hotspot.

Certain genera have undergone massive diversification—the 10 largest genera account for 21.5 percent of the flora—with the two most speciose being Erica (Ericaceae: 658 species) and Aspalathus (Fabaceae: 257 species). Species richness and local endemism is greatest in the southwest; the Cape Peninsula (471 km²) alone supports 2,256 species (including 90 endemics).

Among the best-recognized plant species in the hotspot are the proteas, particularly the king protea (Protea cynaroides), which is South Africa's national flower, and the red disa (Disa uniflora). Also worth a mention is the Clanwilliam cedar (Widdringtonia cedarbergensis, EN), a graceful but declining relict conifer endemic to the Cederberg mountains in the northwestern part of the region.

VERTEBRATES

Birds
The avifauna of the Cape Floristic Region is characterized by low diversity, most likely the result of structural uniformity in the vegetation and a shortage of available food. Of the 320 or so regularly occurring species of land birds here, only six are endemic. Nevertheless, the area is considered an Endemic Bird Area by BirdLife International, and is home to a number of true fynbos species such as the Cape sugarbird (Promerops cafer), the orange-breasted sunbird (Nectarinia violacea), the Protea canary (Serinus leucopterus) and the Cape siskin (Serinus totta). Although the more widespread Cape griffon (Gyps coprotheres, VU) can still be found in the hotspot, happily none of the endemic birds are considered threatened.

Mammals
While the Cape region never supported concentrations of animals as dense as the African savannas, it did once have significant populations of many of the well-known large mammals, including common eland (Tragelaphus oryx), African buffalo (Syncerus caffer), lions (Panthera leo, VU), black rhinoceros, African elephant (Loxodonta Africana, VU), Mountain zebra (Equus zebra, EN), and hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius). Today, however, nearly all of these populations have disappeared or have been reduced to tiny remnant groups. Two of the most interesting mammals that once lived on the Cape are now extinct: the bluebuck (Hippotragus leucophaeus) and the quagga (Equus quagga), a subspecies of the plains zebra that had no stripes on the rear part of its body, both disappeared in the 1800s.

Today, there are about 90 species of mammals in the hotspot, four of which are endemic, including two species of golden moles: the Fynbos golden mole (Amblysomus corriae) and Van Zyl’s golden mole (Cryptochloris zyli, CR). Of the region's remaining large mammals, one of the most beautiful is the bontebok (Damaliscus dorcas dorcas), an antelope that, though nearly extinct in the mid-1800s, was saved by the dedication of a small group of conservationists. Today, the bontebok numbers about 2,000, and the prospects for the species’ survival are quite good. The hotspot is also the home of several small solitary antelope species including the Cape grysbok (Raphicerus melanotis).

Reptiles
Reptile diversity in the Cape Floristic Region is relatively high, with about 100 species, nearly a quarter of which are endemic. The Cape boasts an impressive level of tortoise diversity. South Africa itself has the highest tortoise diversity on Earth, and five species are found almost exclusively within the Cape Floristic Region. These include the angulate tortoise (Chersina angulata); parrot-beaked tortoise (Homopus areolatus); geometric tortoise (Psammobates geometricus, EN); and leopard tortoise (Geochelone pardalis). The geometric tortoise is one of the rarest tortoise species in world. It has lost 97 percent of its habitat, and only 2,000-3,000 individuals survive in approximately 30 localities in a small patch of about 50 km².

Amphibians
There are more than 40 species of amphibians in the hotspot. Sixteen of these are endemic, including the Table Mountain ghost frog (Heleophryne rosei, CR) which is found only on the slopes of Table Mountain between 240 and 1,060 meters above sea level. Two amphibian genera are endemic, each represented by a single species: the micro frog (Microbatrachella capensis, CR), found in sandy, coastal fynbos heathland, and the montane marsh frog (Poyntonia paludicola), a species of mountain fynbos heathland.

Freshwater Fishes
Of the nearly 35 native freshwater fish species in the Cape Floristic Region, more than a dozen are endemic. Some of the more distinctive fishes in the clear mountain streams of this region include the Cape galaxias (Galaxias zebratus), an elongated, scaleless fish, as well as several species of endemic redfin minnows (Pseudobarbus spp.).

INVERTEBRATES

Although little is known about the invertebrate fauna of the region, the few groups that have been studied suggest high levels of endemism. Of more than 230 species of butterflies, about 30 percent are endemic. One study on the Cape Peninsula found 111 invertebrate endemics in 471 km², a level higher than that of plants.
 
 
 
 
 
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