Understanding global patterns of mammalian functional and phylogenetic diversity
Carregando...
Data
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Editor
The Royal Society Publishing
Resumo
Documenting and exploring the patterns of diversity of life on Earth has always been a central theme
in biology. Species richness despite being the most commonly used measure of diversity in macroecological studies suffers from not considering the evolutionary and ecological differences among
species. Phylogenetic diversity (PD) and functional diversity (FD) have been proposed as alternative
measures to overcome this limitation. Although species richness, PD and FD are closely related,
their relationships have never been investigated on a global scale. Comparing PD and FD with
species richness corroborated the general assumptions of surrogacy of the different diversity
measures. However, the analysis of the residual variance suggested that the mismatches between
the diversity measures are influenced by environmental conditions. PD increased relative to species
richness with increasing mean annual temperature, whereas FD decreased with decreasing seasonality
relative to PD. We also show that the tropical areas are characterized by a FD deficit, a phenomenon, that suggests that in tropical areas more species can be packed into the ecological space. We discuss potential mechanisms that could have resulted in the gradient of spatial mismatch observed in the different biodiversity measures and draw parallels to local scale studies.We conclude that the use of multiple diversity measures on a global scale can help to elucidate the relative importance of historical and ecological processes shaping the present gradients in mammalian diversity.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
Citação
SAFI, Kamran; CIANCIARUSO, Marcus V.; LOYOLA, Rafael D.; BRITO, Daniel; MARSCHAL, Katrina Armour; DINIZ FILHO, José Alexandre F. Understanding global patterns of mammalian functional and phylogenetic diversity. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. Biological Sciences, v. 366, n. 1577, p. 2536-2544, Aug. 2011.