1. Trang chủ
  2. » Thể loại khác

Encyclopedia of biodiversity encyclopedia of biodiversity, (7 volume set) ( PDFDrive ) 1734

1 3 0

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Định dạng
Số trang 1
Dung lượng 60,34 KB

Các công cụ chuyển đổi và chỉnh sửa cho tài liệu này

Nội dung

McCain has performed a series of global meta-analyses on elevational richness patterns among taxonomic groups from published studies.. Nonflying small mammals rodents, shrews, marsupials

Trang 1

elevations of observation (interpolation) Interpolation can

create an artificial hump in species richness along the

ele-vational gradient if sampling is incomplete (Grytnes and

Romdal, 2008) If more detailed specimen information is

available, uneven sampling may be accounted for by using

rarefaction or extrapolation (Grytnes and Romdal, 2008),

without such information error simulations can test for

pat-tern robustness (e.g.,McCain, 2007a)

Rahbek (2005) conducted an overview of elevational

richness patterns from the literature The majority of these

studies treated plants and he demonstrated that almost 50% of

these studies found a humped pattern, and around 25% had a

monotonic decrease with elevation The fraction of

hump-shaped patterns increased to around 70% after excluding

studies that did not consider the whole gradient (Figure 1(a):

plants) Rahbek’s study also demonstrated the importance of

scale, for example, a hump-shaped pattern is more common if

a single transect is studied (i.e., alpha diversity), than if the

pattern is studied on a whole mountain range (i.e., gamma

diversity)

McCain has performed a series of global meta-analyses on

elevational richness patterns among taxonomic groups from

published studies These and previous analyses clearly show

that the observed pattern depends on the organism studied

and the local climatic conditions (Figure 1(a); McCain, 2005,

2007a, 2009, 2010;Rahbek, 2005) Nonflying small mammals

(rodents, shrews, marsupials) almost ubiquitously

demon-strate unimodal richness patterns with the highest richness

at intermediate elevations (robust, informative gradients

(RIG) ¼ 54; McCain, 2005) Bats demonstrate two global

patterns: half of the studies found decreasing species richness

with increasing elevation and the other half found unimodal

richness patterns (RIG ¼ 12;McCain, 2007a) As stated above,

Rahbek found that plants tend to show mostly unimodal

richness patterns (RIG ¼ 21; from Rahbek, 2005, Figure 3f)

Birds show more variation in their elevational richness

pat-terns: 30% are decreasing, 43% have high diversity across most

of the lower portion of the gradient then decrease (low plateau

in diversity; e.g.,Figure 1(a)), and the final 27% have

unim-odal richness (RIG ¼ 95; McCain, 2009) Finally, for reptiles

54% show a decreasing pattern, 25% have a low plateau, and

21% have a unimodal richness pattern (RIG ¼ 24; McCain,

2010;Figure 1(a))

Mountain regions often host a large fraction of endemic

species (e.g.,Orme et al., 2005) Considering that isolation is

an important factor for speciation; it is no surprise that

frac-tion of endemic species tends to increase with altitude

re-sulting in a peak in species richness at intermediate elevations

above the peak in total species richness For vascular plants in

the highest mountains of the world the fraction of endemics

increases linearly from the lowlands to the highest point

where plants are found (around 6000 m above sea level)

(Vetaas and Grytnes, 2002) This results in a peak in endemic

richness around 4000 m, whereas the total number of species

peaks around 1500 m Studies on avian mountain endemics

demonstrated their greatest diversity at intermediate elevations

between 1500 and 3000 m, although somewhat lower on

shorter mountains, even though overall diversity decreases

monotonically with elevation (e.g., Stotz et al., 1996) Such

contrasting patterns in total species richness and endemic

species richness are most likely commonplace along ele-vational gradients, particularly for highly diverse groups

Discussion of Possible Causes Elevational gradients are invaluable for discerning between diversity hypotheses The small spatial scale, the thousands

of independent replicates on mountains across the globe

of various heights and in various climates, the high variability

in richness patterns among taxonomic groups, and the predictable trends in abiotic factors with elevation allow globally distributed elevational gradients to be used as natural experiments, allowing for rigorous testing of hypotheses The causes commonly mentioned for elevational patterns in spe-cies richness are very similar to the causes used to explain other broad-scale factors in species richness These can be grouped into four categories: climatic hypotheses based on current abiotic conditions, spatial hypotheses of area and spatial constraint, historical hypotheses invoking processes occurring across evolutionary time scales, and biotic hypoth-eses (e.g., community overlap (ecotones), source–sink dy-namics, and habitat heterogeneity) Below the authors describe some of the most commonly asserted hypotheses and assess their current level of support

Climatic Hypotheses Climatic variables like temperature, rainfall, and productivity are probably the most commonly cited causes for broad-scale patterns in species richness and elevational patterns are no exception Temperature has a simple relationship with altitude

as it decreases monotonically by 0.3–0.6 1C per 100 m ele-vational gain Rainfall often follows a more complex rela-tionship with altitude and maximum rainfall is often found at intermediate elevations, but is also known to increase with elevation or be high across a broad band of low to inter-mediate elevations In tropical areas the zone of maximum humidity often corresponds to the cloud zone and horizontal precipitation from low-lying clouds can significantly increase the water availability at those elevations

Climate may affect elevational species richness patterns in several ways First, climatic tolerances of the studied species may put restrictions on how many species that can survive at different elevations This will have different effects on different species groups, and may be a result of their evolutionary his-tory and niche conservatism (Wiens et al., 2010) Some species groups (e.g., epiphytic plants, salamanders) are dependent on high and constant moisture, whereas others may be restricted

by a certain winter temperature As a result, different species groups will show different elevational richness patterns, exactly what was demonstrated by Whittaker’s early studies and confirmed by McCain’s meta-analyses Second, species richness may depend on productivity through the number of individuals that are found in an area Higher productivity leads to higher number of individuals, which in turn leads to higher species richness Primary productivity is dependent on temperature and precipitation Because rainfall in many cases increases with elevation or has a humped relationship with

Elevational Trends in Biodiversity 151

Ngày đăng: 28/10/2022, 11:07

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN

TÀI LIỆU CÙNG NGƯỜI DÙNG

TÀI LIỆU LIÊN QUAN

🧩 Sản phẩm bạn có thể quan tâm