Frontiers of Biogeography | |
Species–area relationships of the Aegean, a comparative approach between six taxa | |
article | |
Leonidas Maroulis1  Moisis Mylonas1  Katerina Vardinoyannis2  | |
[1] Department of Biology, University of Crete;Natural History Museum of Crete, University of Crete | |
关键词: Aegean archipelago; biodiversity; island biogeography; islands; model selection; species-area relationship; | |
DOI : 10.21425/F5FBG52929 | |
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合) | |
来源: International Biogeography Society | |
【 摘 要 】
Islands occupy a proportionately small area on Earth, however they play a crucial role in Ecology and Biogeography, as they constitute “natural laboratories”. The increased number of species, with increasing island area, is such a commonly observed pattern that it has been labelled as one of the few laws of ecology. The Aegean archipelago is of broad biogeographical interest, as it has a considerable number of islands in addition to a rich paleogeographical and geological history, while being divided among three continents (Europe, Asia, Africa). As a result, the composition of life in the Aegean is dominated by species of European, Asian, African origin as well as species endemic in the archipelago. In this framework, we approached the species–area relationship (SAR) of the Aegean islands for six different organismic groups (birds, herptiles, snails, isopods, tenebrionids and chilopods) and 20 different models. The aim was to determine which model(s) perform better for each taxon and also to compare the z and C parameters of the power model between animal groups, which are the only model parameters to date that have been linked with biological processes. We compared the relationship across different taxa for the entire archipelago and for the exact same islands, in two subgroups with similar paleogeographic history and environmental conditions in the central and eastern Aegean. For the taxonomic groups that were examined a strong correlation between the number of species and area was found, except for chilopods and herptiles. Although there is no universal best model for the SAR of the Aegean, the power model performed better for invertebrates, whereas concerning vertebrates there was more ambiguity in the shape of the relationship.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
【 预 览 】
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