Abstract

Broad-scale patterns of species richness result from differential coexistence among species in distinct regions of the globe, determined by the species’ ranges and their properties such as size, shape and location. Thus, species richness and ranges are inherently linked. These two biodiversity features also yield primary information for conservation assessments. However, species richness and range size have been usually studied separately and no formal analytical link has been established. In my PhD thesis, I applied and extended a recently developed conceptual and methodological framework to study geographical association among species and similarity among sites. This range–diversity framework, along with stochastic simulation modelling, allowed me to jointly evaluate the relationship between diversity and distribution, to infer potential processes underlying composite patterns of phyllostomid bats, and to use this approach to inform conservation assessments for the Mexican avifauna. I highlight the need to explore composite patterns for understanding biodiversity patterns and show how combining diversity and distributional data can help describe complex biogeographical patterns, providing a transparent and explicit application for initial conservation assessments.

Highlights

  • One of the most conspicuous biodiversity patterns is the geographical variation in species richness

  • Explaining the causes of geographical species richness patterns remains elusive (Mittelbach et al 2007). These patterns result from the differential coexistence of species in different regions of the globe, in turn determined by the properties of species’ geographical ranges such as size, shape, location and overlap (Gotelli et al 2009)

  • In most of these approaches, species richness has been the sole response variable, with the predictive power of different models being assessed using various goodness-of-fit statistics comparing observed versus expected richness values (Gotelli et al 2009)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

One of the most conspicuous biodiversity patterns is the geographical variation in species richness. Species richness, range size, diversity field, range–diversity plots, conservation biogeography, stochastic models

Results
Conclusion
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