Isla Rasa, a small (0.68 km 2) but globally important seabird island in the Gulf of California, has a fl ora of only 14 vascular plant species found in three vegetation zones. Signifi cant physical alteration of the island's surface and the introduction of non-native rodents, eradicated in 1995, add restoration ecology to the remarkable biology of the island. Over a century of botanical collections and observations record a consistently depauperate fl ora, best understood in the context of extreme aridity, isolation, and elevated levels of nitrogen and phosphorus from bird guano. The shaping factor of guano on the dearth of fl oristic diversity illustrates close connection between marine and terrestrial ecosystems in the Gulf of California. El Niño events that trigger collapses in marine productivity and crashes in seabird reproduction bring above-average winter rainfall pulses and rapid plant growth. Two new island records are reported (Rhizophora mangle and Viscainoa geniculata). Matched photographs show signifi cant increase in the cholla cactus (Cylindropuntia fulgida) since 1971. Baseline knowledge of seabird breeding ecology and the fl ora of the island position Isla Rasa as a preeminent locality to study and monitor the ecological dynamics of a desert island in the context of restoration ecology and global environmental change.
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