The Tahitian Residual Genera.
The non-endemic genera occurring alone in the Tahitian region and not found either in Hawaii or in one or other of the three groups of the Fijian region (Fiji, Tonga, Samoa) are not more than half a dozen. These six genera are exceedingly interesting; but since each tells a different story and gives its own independent indication they cannot be treated in a collective sense. Nor are they all to be regarded as anomalies in plant-distribution, since with a single exception there is scarcely one concerning which it is not in some way possible to give an explanation of its isolation without coming into conflict with the principles of plant-dispersal. The exception is Lepinia tahitensis, which, without presenting any very evident capacity for dispersal, has not been recorded from any other localities in the Pacific than the far-separated Solomon and Tahitian Groups. There is a suspicion that, as in the case of the residual genera of Hawaii, America may have contributed some of the original plants, since three of the genera, Buttneria, Coriaria, and Bidens, occur in that continent, and in the case of Coriaria Tahiti possesses a species found in South America as well as in New Zealand.
One of the trees in question is Cratæva religiosa, an Asiatic species, which may be placed among a group of trees, including Cananga odorata and Fagræa Berteriana, which, whilst they are much esteemed by the inhabitants of the South Pacific for their fruits or their flowers, and are often planted in and around their villages, possess fruits that attract birds, and in the case of Cananga are known to be dispersed by fruit-pigeons. Probably the aborigines and the birds have worked together in the distribution of these trees.
The genera Buttneria of the Sterculiaceæ and Berrya of the Tiliaceæ are represented in this region by species that must owe their dispersal to birds, though I have no data relating to the matter of their dispersal, their fruits being capsular, in the first case prickly. Coriaria is a mountain genus in Tahiti and will be found discussed in [Chapter XXIV.] in connection with the Tahitian mountain-flora. Its absence from the West Polynesian groups is no doubt to be connected with their insufficient altitude. In addition to the introduced Bidens pilosa, a common tropical weed, Tahiti possesses two other truly indigenous species of Bidens, of which one at least is peculiar to the region. The achenes of this genus are well known to be adapted for dispersal in a bird’s feathers; and since the genus has its principal home in America, no other indigenous species having been recorded from South Polynesia, it is not unlikely that the parent species was American.
One of the numerous enigmas of the Pacific floras is concerned with the presence in the islands of Tahiti and Moorea (Eimeo), in the Society Group, of the Apocynaceous tree, Lepinia tahitensis. The genus contains this solitary species, which has been collected only in one other locality, namely, in the Solomon Group, where it was obtained by the Rev. R. B. Comins. Such an instance of disconnected distribution is rare in the Pacific Islands, and undoubtedly it represents one of the difficulties of the Tahitian flora. The fruits, which are indehiscent and five or six inches in length, possess a fibrous pericarp and a single seed. No data are to hand relating to the capacities for dispersal possessed by this plant, but it is certain that it has had some means of crossing the sea between the adjacent islands of Tahiti and Moorea. (See Hemsley, Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot., xxx. 165.)