Abstract

Insect diversity patterns of high mountain ecosystems remain poorly studied in the tropics. Sampling dung beetles of the subfamilies Aphodiinae, Scarabaeinae, and Geotrupinae was carried out at four volcanoes in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt (TMVB) in the Mexican transition zone at 2,700 and 3,400 MASL, and on the windward and leeward sides. Sampling units represented a forest–shrubland–pasture (FSP) mosaic typical of this mountain region. A total of 3,430 individuals of 29 dung beetle species were collected. Diversity, abundance and compositional similarity (CS) displayed a high variability at all scales; elevation, cardinal direction, or FSP mosaics did not show any patterns of higher or lower values of those measures. The four mountains were different regarding dispersion patterns and taxonomic groups, both for species and individuals. Onthophagus chevrolati dominated all four mountains with an overall relative abundance of 63%. CS was not related to distance among mountains, but when O. chevrolati was excluded from the analysis, CS values based on species abundance decreased with increasing distance. Speciation, dispersion, and environmental instability are suggested as the main drivers of high mountain diversity patterns, acting together at different spatial and temporal scales. Three species new to science were collected (>10% of all species sampled). These discoveries may indicate that speciation rate is high among these volcanoes—a hypothesis that is also supported by the elevated number of collected species with a restricted montane distribution. Dispersion is an important factor in driving species composition, although naturally limited between high mountains; horizontal colonization events at different time scales may best explain the observed species composition in the TMVB, complemented by vertical colonization events to a lesser extent. Environmental instability may be the main factor causing the high variability of diversity and abundance patterns found during sampling. Together, we interpret these results as indicating that species richness and composition in the high mountains of the TMVB may be driven by biogeographical history while variability in diversity is determined by ecological factors. We argue that current conservation strategies do not focus sufficiently on protecting high mountain fauna, and that there is a need for developing and applying new conservation concepts that take into account the high spatial and temporal variability of this system.

Highlights

  • The importance of studying high mountain ecosystems in order to understand biodiversity patterns and evolutionary processes is widely recognized (Korner, 2000; Schmitt, 2009)

  • This study provides evidence that high mountains can hold a diverse dung beetle community

  • Unexpected and contrary to our predictions, we found high variability in diversity patterns at different spatial scales, both within and between mountains

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of studying high mountain ecosystems in order to understand biodiversity patterns and evolutionary processes is widely recognized (Korner, 2000; Schmitt, 2009). Mountain tops have different ecological conditions from their surrounding lowlands, and interconnection of their biota is less than in other ecosystems. Mountain tops can act as refuges for flora and fauna that had expanded during glacial or cooler conditions; as a consequence, their biota exhibits greater differences when compared to that in lower elevations, especially in tropical areas where ecological conditions change dramatically among different altitudes (Korner, 2007). Mountain gradients often show higher regional biodiversity due to a high species turnover than areas of the same size in tropical lowlands (Rahbek, 1997). With the Earth facing climate change, species of high mountains are thought to be exposed to greater extinction risk due to a changing ecosystem and upward colonization of species adapted to warmer climates (Cahill et al, 2012)

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