Patterns of species richness, endemism and environmental gradients of African reptiles
Autor: | Amir Lewin, Aaron M. Bauer, Donald G. Broadley, Jonathan Belmaker, Laurent Chirio, Shai Meiri, Matthew LeBreton, Anat Feldman, Uri Roll, Yuval Itescu, Oliver J.S. Tallowin, Maria Novosolov, Enav Vidan, Danny Meirte, Zoltán T. Nagy, Erez Maza, Jean-François Trape |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
range-size quartiles
0106 biological sciences 0301 basic medicine 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences 03 medical and health sciences Ecoregion biology.animal species richness ecoregions Endemism Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Ecology biology Lizard Species diversity Vertebrate Body size and species richness snakes cross-taxon congruence reptiles Spatial heterogeneity lizards 030104 developmental biology climatic variables endemism Species richness |
Zdroj: | Journal of Biogeography. 43:2380-2390 |
ISSN: | 0305-0270 |
DOI: | 10.1111/jbi.12848 |
Popis: | Aim To map and assess the richness patterns of reptiles (and included groups: amphisbaenians, crocodiles, lizards, snakes and turtles) in Africa, quantify the overlap in species richness of reptiles (and included groups) with the other terrestrial vertebrate classes, investigate the environmental correlates underlying these patterns, and evaluate the role of range size on richness patterns. Location Africa. Methods We assembled a data set of distributions of all African reptile species. We tested the spatial congruence of reptile richness with that of amphibians, birds and mammals. We further tested the relative importance of temperature, precipitation, elevation range and net primary productivity for species richness over two spatial scales (ecoregions and 1° grids). We arranged reptile and vertebrate groups into range-size quartiles in order to evaluate the role of range size in producing richness patterns. Results Reptile, amphibian, bird and mammal richness are largely congruent (r = 0.79–0.86) and respond similarly to environmental variables (mainly productivity and precipitation). Ecoregion size accounts for more variation in the richness of reptiles than in that of other groups. Lizard distributions are distinct with several areas of high species richness where other vertebrate groups (including snakes) are species-poor, especially in arid ecoregions. Habitat heterogeneity is the best predictor of narrow-ranging species, but remains relatively important in explaining lizard richness even for species with large range sizes. Main conclusions Reptile richness varies with similar environmental variables as the other vertebrates in Africa, reflecting the disproportionate influence of snakes on reptile richness, a result of their large ranges. Richness gradients of narrow-ranged vertebrates differ from those of widespread taxa, which may demonstrate different centres of endemism for reptile subclades in Africa. Lizard richness varies mostly with habitat heterogeneity independent of range size, which suggests that the difference in response of lizards is due to their ecological characteristics. These results, over two spatial scales and multiple range-size quartiles, allow us to reliably interpret the influence of environmental variables on patterns of reptile richness and congruency. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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