scholarly journals Modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in China: Testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environment

2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 229-232
Author(s):  
Youhua Chen
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhixin Wen ◽  
Anderson Feijó ◽  
Jilong Cheng ◽  
Yuanbao Du ◽  
Deyan Ge ◽  
...  

Abstract Recent work on tropical montane small mammals and birds has shown that abundance–elevational range size relationships (i.e., the relationship between abundance of a species and its elevational range size) can be manifested in a number of distinct generalized patterns. To understand why different patterns occur, one first must understand the causal mechanisms behind patterns of interspecific variation in species abundance and elevational range size. Using small mammal data along five elevational gradients in Southwest China, we assessed the relative importance of body mass, niche position (i.e., how typical the environmental conditions in which a species occurs are of the full set of conditions under consideration) and niche breadth in explaining the interspecific variation in mean abundance of species of small mammals, and elevational range size. Niche position and niche breadth were calculated using outlying mean index analysis based on 24 environmental variables. The relative importance of body mass, niche position, and niche breadth, in explaining the mean abundance and elevational range size of species were examined using phylogenetic regression and phylogenetic path analyses. Along each of five elevational gradients, body mass maintained a nonsignificant (P > 0.05) relationship both with mean abundance and elevational range size when the effects of phylogeny were taken into account. Niche position had a negative effect on mean abundance and elevational range size (species with a niche position close to edge environmental conditions were rarer and had smaller elevational range sizes) across five gradients (significant negative effect: three gradients for mean abundance; five gradients for elevational range size). Conversely, a positive effect of niche breadth on mean abundance and elevational range size was observed consistently, yet the effect was significant only for some gradients (mean abundance: two gradients; elevational range size: four gradients). Our study suggests that niche position and niche breadth both are good predictors of abundance and elevational range size of montane small mammals; niche position and niche breadth therefore play a strong role in the formation of abundance–elevational range size relationship.


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 391-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monika Böhm ◽  
Rhiannon Williams ◽  
Huw R. Bramhall ◽  
Kirsten M. McMillan ◽  
Ana D. Davidson ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 513-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
Şerban Procheş ◽  
John R. U. Wilson ◽  
David M. Richardson ◽  
Marcel Rejmánek

2019 ◽  
Vol 286 (1915) ◽  
pp. 20191757
Author(s):  
Meaghan Conway ◽  
Brian J. Olsen

Diversification rates vary greatly among taxa. Understanding how species-specific traits influence speciation rates will help elucidate mechanisms driving biodiversity over broad spatio-temporal scales. Ecological specialization and range size are two hypothesized drivers of speciation rates, yet each mechanism predicts both increases and decreases in speciation. We constructed a continuous index of specialization using avian bill morphology to determine the relative effect of specialization and range size and shape on speciation rates across 559 species within the Emberizoidea superfamily, a morphologically diverse New World clade. We found a significant positive correlation between specialization and speciation rate and a negative correlation with range size. Only the effect of specialization persisted after removing island endemics, however, suggesting that ecological specialization is an important driver of diversity across large macroevolutionary scales, and the relative importance of specific drivers may differ between islands and continents.


2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A678-A679
Author(s):  
G ANDERSON ◽  
S WILKINS ◽  
T MURPHY ◽  
G CLEGHORN ◽  
D FRAZER

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