Abstract

We analyze the distribution of body masses for 701 species of South American terrestrial mammals at different spatial resolutions from continental to biome, to local habitat scales. Previous studies on North American mammals suggest that body size distributions are highly modal and right skewed at continental scales, but become more uniform as spatial scale decreases. We show, in general, that these patterns also hold for the body size distribution of South American terrestrial mammals. However, we also found some striking differences attributable to the history of this biota and related to the Great American Biotic Interchange (GABI). At continental scales the distribution of body masses for South American mammals is highly right skewed and possesses several modes. One mode corresponds to species derived from North American ancestors, while a second mode, towards larger size, is characteristic of the South American stock. The same pattern is apparent at biome and local habitat scales. We found support for the progressive flattening of the distributions as spatial scale decreases, but they do not become as flat (indistinguishable from log-uniform) as they do in North America. However, the pattern is stronger for species of South American origin. Our results indicate that there is a strong historical component affecting the macroecological structure of contemporary assemblages at different spatial scales. Body size distributions can provide valuable information on the ways biotas built up.

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