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Multiscale assessment of patterns of avian species richness

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dc.contributor.author Rahbek, Carsten
dc.contributor.author Graves, Gary R.
dc.date.accessioned 2007-08-06T16:54:49Z
dc.date.available 2007-08-06T16:54:49Z
dc.date.issued 2001
dc.identifier.citation Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 98(8): 4534-4539
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10088/2068
dc.description.abstract The search for a common cause of species richness gradients has spawned more than 100 explanatory hypotheses in just the past two decades. Despite recent conceptual advances, further refinement of the most plausible models has been stifled by the difficulty of compiling high-resolution databases at continental scales. We used a database of the geographic ranges of 2,869 species of birds breeding in South America (nearly a third of the world's living avian species) to explore the influence of climate, quadrat area, ecosystem diversity, and topography on species richness gradients at 10 spatial scales (quadrat area, [apprxeq]12,300 to [apprxeq]1,225,000 km2). Topography, precipitation, topography [x] latitude, ecosystem diversity, and cloud cover emerged as the most important predictors of regional variability of species richness in regression models incorporating 16 independent variables, although ranking of variables depended on spatial scale. Direct measures of ambient energy such as mean and maximum temperature were of ancillary importance. Species richness values for 1[degree] [x] 1[degree] latitude-longitude quadrats in the Andes (peaking at 845 species) were [apprxeq]30-250% greater than those recorded at equivalent latitudes in the central Amazon basin. These findings reflect the extraordinary abundance of species associated with humid montane regions at equatorial latitudes and the importance of orography in avian speciation. In a broader context, our data reinforce the hypothesis that terrestrial species richness from the equator to the poles is ultimately governed by a synergism between climate and coarse-scale topographic heterogeneity. en_US
dc.format.extent 1475858 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.title Multiscale assessment of patterns of avian species richness


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