paleoendemics
Paleoendemics are species that represent remnants of once widespread and diverse lineages. The term describes taxa with ancient evolutionary origins and long fossil records that now survive only in restricted, often isolated geographic regions. Paleoendemics are typically contrasted with neoendemics, which arise more recently through speciation in confined areas, and with the broader concept of living fossils, where little morphological change has occurred over long timescales.
These taxa are often characterized by a combination of features: an ancient lineage that has persisted while
Well-known examples include Ginkgo biloba, a single surviving species of a lineage dating back over 200 million
In conservation, paleoendemics are often prioritized because their loss would mean the extinction of entire unique