Abstract

The study of current distribution patterns of amphibian species in South America is of particular interest in areas such as evolutionary ecology and conservation biology. These patterns could be playing an important role in biological interactions, population size, and connectivity, and potential extinction risk in amphibians. Here, we tested the effects of spatial and environmental factors on the variation, turnover, and phylogenetic diversity of anuran amphibian species in tropical forests of western Ecuador. Data for presence/absence of 101 species of 34 genera and 10 families registered in 12 sites (nested in four biogeographic units) were obtained through fieldwork, museum collections, and literature records. We examined the influence of geographical, altitudinal, temperature, and precipitation distances on differences in anuran composition between sites. We found significant positive correlations among all of these variables with anuran distribution. The greatest alpha diversity (species richness) was found in the Equatorial Chocó biogeographic unit. Equatorial Pacific biogeographic unit could act as a transition zone between the Equatorial Chocó and Equatorial Tumbes. The western Andes (Western Cordillera biogeographic unit) was the most dissimilar and exhibited a higher species turnover rate than the other biogeographic units. Our results suggest that precipitation and elevation play a key role in maintaining the diversity of amphibian species in western Ecuador.

Highlights

  • Understanding the influence of environmental factors on commu‐ nity membership is an essential part of determining how species are distributed in space (Gaston, 2000; Stein, Gerstner, & Kreft, 2014)

  • We evaluated if there was an effect of the three environmental variables previously mentioned on S and phylogenetic diversity (PD), in order to select the best‐fit model that explains the maximum amount of variance, we created two multiple regression models to explain the two response variables, this was done in R 3.3.2 (R Core Team, 2016)

  • We found heterogeneity in the alpha, beta, and phylogenetic diver‐ sity among the four Ecuadorian biogeographic units

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Understanding the influence of environmental factors on commu‐ nity membership is an essential part of determining how species are distributed in space (Gaston, 2000; Stein, Gerstner, & Kreft, 2014). Explaining the distribution patterns of species in terms of envi‐ ronmental variables can provide insights on the operational limits of species in their distributional areas (Gotelli et al, 2009; Wiens, 2011). Community patterns are better explained by integrating both envi‐ ronmental and ecological variables when determining biogeographic patterns at different scales (Jiménez‐Robles, Guayasamin, Ron, & De la Riva, 2017; Wiens, 2011).

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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