
There's a second reason
for our low diversity on land -- the small size of our islands. In general,
the smaller the island, the fewer the species on it. For example, tiny Rose
Atoll (0.4 sq mi) supports only 5 native plant species, 21 birds (virtually
all seabirds), 2 geckos, and 2 sea turtles.
So, although American
Samoa technically has 'tropical rainforests' due to our high level of rainfall
(200- 300 inches per year in some mountainous areas), we lack the high species
richness found in the jungle rainforests of Indonesia, Africa or South America
that are filled with hooting monkeys, poison dart frogs, pythons and flesh-eating
piranhas.
On the other hand,
because of our isolation, some terrestrial species in Samoa have evolved over
many thousands of years to such an extent that they have become distinctly
different species found nowhere else but here. For example, 1% of our plant
species occur only in American Samoa; 30% of our plant species and the Samoan
starling (fuia) occur only in the Samoan archipelago (which includes western
Samoa); and the Samoan fruit bat occurs only in the Samoan and Fijian islands.
So, our rainforest may lack diversity, but it contains some species found
nowhere else on earth.

Our native species list also includes about 478 flowering plants and ferns, 25 resident land and water birds, 20 resident seabirds, 7 skinks, 4 geckos, 2 sea turtles, 1 snake, and occasional other visitors (this list does not include all the introduced non-native species like rats, dogs, pigs, toads, myna birds, and many weeds).
There's a certain mystique about the word 'biodiversity' that seems to be associated with images of steamy jungles or wondrous new medicines, but the word more specifically refers to the number of species or 'species richness' of an area. One reason why tropical areas are so fascinating is that they contain the highest numbers of plant and animal species found anywhere on earth.
American Samoa sits squarely in the tropics, so we should have a high biological
diversity here, but we do and we don't. There is a sharp contrast between
the number of plant and animal species that live on land here (few) versus
those that live in our coastal waters (many). Most small islands in the South
Pacific share this characteristic.
To start at the beginning, when our islands emerged as fiery volcanoes from
the depths of the sea, they were devoid of plants or animals. As time passed
and the terrain became more hospitable, life for organisms became possible,
but the plants and animals still had to cross vast ocean distances to get
here from someplace else.
NATURAL HISTORY GUIDE