Abstract

AimCommon species contribute more to species richness patterns (SRPs) than rare species in most studies. Our aim was to test this hypothesis using a novel model system, species living exclusively in subterranean habitats. They consist of mainly rare species (small ranges), only a few of them being common (large ranges), and challenge whether rare species are less important for the development of SRPs in this environment. We separately analyzed aquatic and terrestrial species.LocationWestern Balkans in southeastern Europe.MethodsWe assembled two datasets comprising 431 beetle and 145 amphipod species, representing the model groups of subterranean terrestrial and aquatic diversity, respectively. We assessed the importance of rare and common species using the stepwise reconstruction of SRPs and subsequent correlation analyses, corrected also for the cumulative information content of the subsets based on species prevalence. We applied generalized linear regression models to evaluate the importance of rare and common species in forming SRPs. Additionally, we analyzed the contribution of rare and common species in species‐rich cells.ResultsPatterns of subterranean aquatic and terrestrial species richness overlapped only weakly, with aquatic species having larger ranges than terrestrial ones. Our analyses supported higher importance of common species for forming overall SRPs in both beetles and amphipods. However, in stepwise analysis corrected for information content, results were ambiguous. Common species presented a higher proportion of species than rare species in species‐rich cells.Main ConclusionWe have shown that even in habitats with the domination of rare species, it is still common species that drive SRPs. This may be due to an even spatial distribution of rare species or spatial mismatch in hotspots of rare and common species. SRPs of aquatic and terrestrial subterranean organisms overlap very little, so the conservation approaches need to be habitat specific.

Highlights

  • Species richness, quantified as number of species per geographic unit, is not distributed evenly around the globe (Gaston & Blackburn, 2000; Zagmajster, Malard, Eme, & Culver, 2018)

  • Most of the studies suggested that common species shape the overall species richness patterns (SRPs) (Gaston, 2010; Jetz & Rahbek, 2002; Lennon et al, 2011, 2004)

  • These observations led to appeals to include common species into conservation strate‐ gies, as they “sustain” the SRPs (Gaston, 2010; Neeson et al, 2018)

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Species richness, quantified as number of species per geographic unit, is not distributed evenly around the globe (Gaston & Blackburn, 2000; Zagmajster, Malard, Eme, & Culver, 2018). Most of the studies suggested that common species shape the overall SRPs (Gaston, 2010; Jetz & Rahbek, 2002; Lennon et al, 2011, 2004). These observations led to appeals to include common species into conservation strate‐ gies, as they “sustain” the SRPs (Gaston, 2010; Neeson et al, 2018).

| METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call