Abstract

Are we entering a new ‘Golden Age’ of biogeography, with continued development of infrastructure and ideas? We highlight recent developments, and the challenges and opportunities they bring, in light of the snapshot provided by the 7th biennial meeting of the International Biogeography Society (IBS 2015). We summarize themes in and across 15 symposia using narrative analysis and word clouds, which we complement with recent publication trends and ‘research fronts’. We find that biogeography is still strongly defined by core sub-disciplines that reflect its origins in botanical, zoological (particularly bird and mammal), and geographic (e.g., island, montane) studies of the 1800s. That core is being enriched by large datasets (e.g. of environmental variables, ‘omics’, species’ occurrences, traits) and new techniques (e.g., advances in genetics, remote sensing, modeling) that promote studies with increasing detail and at increasing scales; disciplinary breadth is being diversified (e.g., by developments in paleobiogeography and microbiology) and integrated through the transfer of approaches and sharing of theory (e.g., spatial modeling and phylogenetics in evolutionary–ecological contexts). Yet some subdisciplines remain on the fringe (e.g., marine biogeography, deep-time paleobiogeography), new horizons and new theory may be overshadowed by popular techniques (e.g., species distribution modelling), and hypotheses, data, and analyses may each be wanting. Trends in publication suggest a shift away from traditional biogeography journals to multidisciplinary or open access journals. Thus, there are currently many opportunities and challenges as biogeography increasingly addresses human impacts on, and stewardship of, the planet (e.g., Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services). As in the past, biogeographers doubtless will continue to be engaged by new data and methods in exploring the nexus between biology and geography for decades into the future. But golden ages come and go, and they need not touch every domain in a discipline nor affect subdisciplines at the same time; moreover, what appears to be a Golden Age may sometimes have an undesirable ‘Midas touch’. Contexts within and outwith biogeography—e.g., methods, knowledge, climate, biodiversity, politics—are continually changing, and at times it can be challenging to establish or maintain relevance. In so many races with the Red Queen, we suggest that biogeography will enjoy greatest success if we also increasingly engage with the epistemology of our discipline.

Highlights

  • Biogeography is an evolving (e.g., Whittaker 2014) centuries-old discipline (e.g., von Humboldt and Bonpland 1807; Darwin 1859; Wallace 1881)

  • In so many races with the Red Queen, we suggest that biogeography will enjoy greatest success if we increasingly engage with the epistemology of our discipline

  • The first horizon scan, which emerged from the 6th Biennial meeting of the International Biogeography Society (IBS) in 2013, noted benefits in biogeography accruing from rapid data accumulation, new tools, a renaissance of interdisciplinarity, including integration across the evolution–ecology continuum, and their application in re-examining classical assumptions and hypotheses (Dawson et al 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Biogeography is an evolving (e.g., Whittaker 2014) centuries-old discipline (e.g., von Humboldt and Bonpland 1807; Darwin 1859; Wallace 1881) This is the second horizon scan in a series intended to report, track, and understand recent changes in biogeography. We noted that advances were taxonomically and geographically biased, and that key theoretical frameworks still awaited tools to handle, or strategies to simplify, the complexity of empirical systems. Meeting these challenges, we thought, might enable biogeography’s descriptive and theoretical branches to be united, establishing a greater role within and outside academia, for example in conservation biogeography and mitigating threats to biodiversity. In the past few years, we have seen, for example, greater involvement of IBS in the Intergovernmental SciencePolicy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES; Opgenoorth and Faith 2014), publications in the highest profile general science journals applying new tools to old questions (e.g., Holt et al 2013, Helmus et al 2014, van Kleunen et al 2015), and recognition of a new golden age in island biogeography (Fernández-Palacios et al 2015, Santos et al 2016)

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