I thought about it being fuel, but it didn't quite make sense - fuelling is, I suppose, equal to torque x efficiency. You have 4x the full throttle torque at 7000 RPM than you do at 2000 RPM, yet the fuelling is barely double.
I guess that means it is really inefficient at the low end, which doesn't matter at all, of course.
I wouldn't get hung up on the fuelling spikes.
The key thing to work out is how to increase usability on track. If you don't already hold it at very high revs into and out of the corners, you're going to have to start doing that. I don't know how practical that is in your car at present - I assume you can keep it 5K+ all the time; when I had the n/a s2 exige I found I could keep it 6K+ all the time but it was hard work and sometimes compromised gear choice in/out of corners. The sharp torque difference between 5K and 6K in your map is possibly going to be an issue for managing traction on the corner exit if you drop down out of the power band.
With cams like yours, you will struggle to make the engine good everywhere, I suspect. I would focus on getting the torque higher in the 5K-6K band. Look at overlap on the cams - a bit less overlap might ultimately hurt the top end power (which is probably outside of your RPM limit anyway!) - but it might make the sub-6K less lumpy. Next give it every last RPM you think your bottom end will survive. If you can get a 3,500 RPM power band from 5,000-8,500, for example, then assuming you have the normal R400 gearbox you'll be fine; if you can only go 6,000-8,500, then it will be much tighter - you will end up being compromised in corner gear selection as you have no slack.
gearspeeds