Document details

Macroecological patterns of species distribution, composition and richness of t...

Author(s): Borges, Paulo A. V. cv logo 1 ; Cardoso, Pedro cv logo 2 ; Cunha, Regina Tristão da cv logo 3 ; Gabriel, Rosalina cv logo 4 ; Gonçalves, Vitor cv logo 5 ; Hortal, Joaquín cv logo 6 ; Martins, António M. de Frias cv logo 7 ; Melo, Ireneia cv logo 8 ; Rodrigues, Pedro cv logo 9 ; Santos, Ana M. cv logo 10 ; Silva, Luís cv logo 11 ; Triantis, Kostas A. cv logo 12 ; Vieira, Paulo cv logo 13 ; Vieira, Virgílio cv logo 14

Date: 2011

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/912

Origin: Repositório da Universidade dos Açores

Subject(s): Azores; Island Biogeography; Macroecology; Species-range Size; Distribution; Species-area Relationship; Island Age; Dispersal Ability; Terrestrial Biota; Conservation; Ecology; Patterns of Diversity; Distance Decay of Similarity


Description
We investigate the macroecological patterns of the terrestrial biota of the Azorean archipelago, namely the species-range size distributions, the distance decay of similarity, and the island species–area relationship (ISAR). We use the most recent up-to-date checklists to describe the diversity at the island level for nine groups (Lichens, Fungi, Diatoms, Bryophytes, Vascular Plants, Nematodes, Molluscs, Arthropods, Vertebrates). The particularities of the Azorean biota result in some differences to the patterns commonly found in other oceanic archipelagos. Strikingly, bryophytes, molluscs and vertebrates show a bimodal species-range size distribution, and vascular plants a right unimodal distribution due the high numbers of widespread species. Such high compositional homogeneity between islands also results in non-significant or even negative decays of similarity with distance among islands for most groups. Dispersal ability, together with other particular characteristics of each taxon, also shapes these distributions, as well as the relationships between island species richness, and area and time. Strikingly, the degree of departure of the richness of the whole archipelago from the SAR of its constituent islands largely depends on the dispersal ability of each group. Comparative studies with other oceanic archipelagos of the globe are however needed to understand the biogeographical and evolutionary processes shaping the remarkably low diversity of the Azorean biota.
Document Type Article
Language English
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