Habitat diversity, resource availability and island age in the species-area relationship

被引:3
|
作者
Carey, Mark [1 ,3 ]
Boland, John [1 ]
Keppel, Gunnar [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ South Australia, UniSA STEM, Adelaide, SA, Australia
[2] Univ South Australia, Future Ind Inst, Adelaide, SA, Australia
[3] Univ South Australia, UniSA STEM, Mawson Lakes Campus,GPO Box 2471, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia
关键词
choros model; environmental heterogeneity; general dynamic model; island biogeography; resource availability; species-area relationships; species-area-energy models; EQUILIBRIUM-THEORY; ENERGY; RICHNESS; HETEROGENEITY; BIOGEOGRAPHY; ATTRIBUTES; PATTERNS; BIOLOGY; MODEL; WATER;
D O I
10.1111/jbi.14571
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Aim: The island species-area relationship (ISAR) assumes that the area of islands is homogeneous, or scales with environmental heterogeneity across an archipelago, which is not always the case. We compare the performance of models that adjust or substitute for island area with measures of habitat diversity, island age and resource availability for two taxonomic groups.Location: Five hotspot archipelagos (Azores, Galapagos, Hawaii, Cape Verde, Canary Islands).Taxa: Vascular plants, birds.Methods: We used the mathematical framework of the power law to compare relevant models, treating the one containing only area as a null model against which others were compared. Data were collated from databases and the literature. Models were compared using linear regression within archipelagos and via mixed effect models with archipelago as a random effect.Results: Weighting of island area by habitat diversity and resource availability systematically improved statistical significance and model fits versus the area only power law. Models including island age did not show the same systematic improvement in model fits. For vascular plants, weighting islands by resource availability (energy and water) performed better than weighting by habitat diversity, although for birds these weightings performed equally well.Main Conclusions: Given that islands within archipelagos are fairly heterogeneous in climate, topography and geology, it is worth accounting for this in ISARs. Our results suggest that, for islands in volcanic hotspot archipelagos, this is best done by using direct measures of habitat diversity and resource availability rather than using island age as a proxy. We, therefore, recommend using direct measures, rather than proxies, when investigating the drivers of biodiversity patterns on islands.
引用
收藏
页码:767 / 779
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Environmental filtering underpins the island species-area relationship in a subtropical anthropogenic archipelago
    Liu, Jinliang
    Matthews, Thomas J.
    Zhong, Lei
    Liu, Jiajia
    Wu, Donghao
    Yu, Mingjian
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2020, 108 (02) : 424 - 432
  • [22] Additive partitioning of rarefaction curves and species-area relationships:: unifying α-, β- and γ-diversity with sample size and habitat area
    Crist, Thomas O.
    Veech, Joseph A.
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2006, 9 (08) : 923 - 932
  • [23] SCALE DEPENDENCE AND THE SPECIES-AREA RELATIONSHIP
    PALMER, MW
    WHITE, PS
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1994, 144 (05): : 717 - 740
  • [24] STATISTICS AND BIOLOGY OF THE SPECIES-AREA RELATIONSHIP
    CONNOR, EF
    MCCOY, ED
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1979, 113 (06): : 791 - 833
  • [25] Analysis of an evolutionary species-area relationship
    Losos, JB
    Schluter, D
    NATURE, 2000, 408 (6814) : 847 - 850
  • [26] Fragmentation, grazing and the species-area relationship
    Bogich, Tiffany L.
    Barker, Gary M.
    Mahlfeld, Karin
    Climo, Frank
    Green, Rhys
    Balmford, Andrew
    ECOGRAPHY, 2012, 35 (03) : 224 - 231
  • [27] STATISTICS AND BIOLOGY OF SPECIES-AREA RELATIONSHIP
    CONNOR, EF
    MCCOY, ED
    AMERICAN ZOOLOGIST, 1976, 16 (02): : 270 - 270
  • [28] The species-area relationship in ant ecology
    Ohyama, Leo
    Holt, Robert D.
    Matthews, Thomas J.
    Lucky, Andrea
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2021, 48 (08) : 1824 - 1841
  • [29] ON ESTIMATING THE SPECIES-AREA RELATIONSHIP - COMMENT
    EKBOHM, G
    RYDIN, H
    OIKOS, 1990, 57 (01) : 145 - 146
  • [30] Trophic rank and the species-area relationship
    Holt, RD
    Lawton, JH
    Polis, GA
    Martinez, ND
    ECOLOGY, 1999, 80 (05) : 1495 - 1504