Partitioning sources of variation in vertebrate species richness

被引:52
|
作者
Boone, RB
Krohn, WB
机构
[1] Colorado State Univ, Dept Wildlife Ecol, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
[2] Univ Maine, Maine Cooperat Fish & Wildlife Res Unit, USGS, Biol Resources Div, Orono, ME 04469 USA
关键词
vertebrate species richness; tree regression; partition variation; Maine; USA; geomorphology; climate; woody plants;
D O I
10.1046/j.1365-2699.2000.00386.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Aim To explore biogeographic patterns of terrestrial vertebrates in Maine, USA using techniques that would describe local and spatial correlations with the environment. Location Maine, USA. Methods We delineated the ranges within Maine (86,156 km(2)) of 275 species using literature and expert review. Ranges were combined into species richness maps, and compared to geomorphology, climate, and woody plant distributions. Methods were adapted that compared richness of all vertebrate classes to each environmental correlate, rather than assessing a single explanatory theory. We partitioned variation in species richness into components using tree and multiple linear regression. Methods were used that allowed for useful comparisons between tree and linear regression results. For both methods we partitioned variation into broad-scale (spatially autocorrelated) and fine-scale (spatially uncorrelated) explained and unexplained components. By partitioning variance, and using both tree and linear regression in analyses, we explored the degree of variation in species richness for each vertebrate group that could be explained by the relative contribution of each environmental variable. Results In tree regression, climate variation explained richness better (92% of mean deviance explained for all species) than woody plant Variation (87%) and geomorphology (86%). Reptiles were highly correlated with environmental variation (93%), followed by mammals, amphibians, and birds (each with 84-82% deviance explained). In multiple linear regression, climate was most closely associated with total vertebrate richness (78%), followed by woody plants (67%) and geomorphology (56%). Again, reptiles were closely correlated with the environment (95%), followed by mammals (73%), amphibians (63%) and birds (57%). Main conclusions Comparing variation explained using tree and multiple linear regression quantified the importance of nonlinear relationships and local interactions between species richness and environmental variation, identifying the importance of linear relationships between reptiles and the environment, and nonlinear relationships between birds and woody plants, for example. Conservation planners should capture climatic variation in broad-scale designs; temperatures may shift during climate change, but the underlying correlations between the environment and species richness will presumably remain.
引用
收藏
页码:457 / 470
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Patterns of vertebrate species richness and conservation in Nicaragua
    Gillespie, TW
    Nicholson, KE
    McCrary, J
    NATURAL AREAS JOURNAL, 2001, 21 (02) : 159 - 167
  • [2] Spatial patterns of terrestrial vertebrate species richness in the Brazilian Cerrado
    F. Diniz-Filho, Jose Alexandre
    Bini, Luis Mauricio
    Vieira, Cleiber Marques
    Blamires, Daniel
    Terribile, Levi Carina
    Bastos, Rogeio Pereira
    de Oliveira, Guilherme
    Barreto, Bruno de Souza
    ZOOLOGICAL STUDIES, 2008, 47 (02) : 146 - 157
  • [3] Vertebrate species richness at the mesoscale: relative roles of energy and heterogeneity
    Fraser, RH
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 1998, 7 (03): : 215 - 220
  • [4] HABITAT FRAGMENTATION AND VERTEBRATE SPECIES RICHNESS IN AN URBAN-ENVIRONMENT
    DICKMAN, CR
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 1987, 24 (02) : 337 - 351
  • [5] A multifractal model for spatial variation in species richness
    Laurie, Henri
    Perrier, Edith
    ECOLOGICAL COMPLEXITY, 2010, 7 (01) : 32 - 35
  • [6] Species turnover in vertebrate communities along elevational gradients is idiosyncratic and unrelated to species richness
    McCain, Christy M.
    Beck, Jan
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2016, 25 (03): : 299 - 310
  • [7] VARIATION IN SPECIES RICHNESS - TOWARDS A UNIFICATION OF HYPOTHESES
    PALMER, MW
    FOLIA GEOBOTANICA & PHYTOTAXONOMICA, 1994, 29 (04): : 511 - 530
  • [8] Migration and niche partitioning simultaneously increase species richness and rarity
    Ai, Dexiecuo
    Chu, Chengjin
    Ellwood, M. D. Farnon
    Hou, Rui
    Wang, Gang
    ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2013, 258 : 33 - 39
  • [9] Vertebrate Species Richness at Littoral Beaver Lodges in a Temperate Artificial Pond
    Razik, Imran
    Sagot, Maria
    JOURNAL OF FISH AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT, 2020, 11 (02): : 422 - 429
  • [10] A meta-analysis of recreation effects on vertebrate species richness and abundance
    Larson, Courtney L.
    Reed, Sarah E.
    Merenlender, Adina M.
    Crooks, Kevin R.
    CONSERVATION SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, 2019, 1 (10)