Biogeography: Class I: Biogeographic regions Similarity.

Post on 19-Jan-2018

225 views 0 download

description

First: differentiate climate and evolution New Guinea Costa Rica SIMILAR in their vegetation type and structure, climate, soils, etc DIFFERENTIATED by plants and animals with very different evolutionary histories BIOMES BIOGEOGRAPHIC REGIONS

Transcript of Biogeography: Class I: Biogeographic regions Similarity.

Biogeography:Class I: Biogeographic regions

Similarity

The pattern:different parts of the world have similar types of species

The challenge:How do we set the boundaries of those places?

Biogeographic regions

First: differentiate climate and evolution

New Guinea Costa Rica

SIMILAR in their vegetation type and structure, climate, soils, etc

DIFFERENTIATED by plants and animals with very different evolutionary histories

BIOMES

BIOGEOGRAPHIC REGIONS

Presence Absence

The process → Speciation Dispersal Extinction

Species is:

The raw data

LatitudeTemperate Tropics Temperate

Spec

ies s

imila

rities

Spec

ies r

ichn

ess

Raw data and patterns

Count Similarity

Endemic

CosmopolitanSpecies

distributions

LatitudeTemperate Tropics Temperate

Building the pattern

40+0+4=1

Jaccard:

𝑆11𝑆01+𝑆10+𝑆11

Simpson:

𝑆11𝑆1

44=1

McKnight et al, PlosBiology 2007

GLOBAL PATTERN OF BETTA DIVERSITY

Amphibians

Birds

Mammals

Very dissimilar Very similar

Problems: choice of scale and need for a hierarchy

Realms

Regions

Provinces

Sub-divisions

How did you get to be here? The problem of scale: here → my deskhere → Honoluluhere → Hawaiihere → USAhere → Earth

Problems: choice of taxonomic level

Country Genus Species

Canada Larix laricina

Picea glauca

Picea mariana

Pinus banksiana

Russia Larix sibirica

Picea obovata

Pinus sylvestris

Simpson coefficient

1.0 0.0

Problems: choice of taxa

SpeciationDispersalExtinction

Wallace’s Line

Simpson, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 1977

Potential impacts of climatic change upon geographical

distributions of birds

Problems: temporal changes (Climate change)

HUNTLEY et al. IBIS 2006

NOW 2070

Problems: temporal changes (Climate change)

North Sea fishes are shifting north with climatic warming

snake blenny

Num

ber o

f spe

cies

Average north shifting: 172 km between 1977 and 2001

Perry et al, Science 2009

Climate change and deepening of the North Sea fish assemblage: a biotic indicator of warming seas

Problems: temporal changes (Climate change)

Dulvy et al, journal of Applied Ecology 2008

Fishes are not going extinct now but are

moving deeper

Problems: temporal changes (Climate Change)

Cheung et al. Fish and Fisheries 2009

Invasion and local extinctions can change the structure of local assemblages by up to

60% by 2050

Problems: temporal changes (Anthropogenic)

LALIBERTE & RIPPLE, Bioscience 2004

Human Influence index

Low

High

Problems: range shifts (Invasive species)

SPECIES ARE MOVING AROUND

GLOBAL SHIPPING LINES

Schofield, Aquatic Invasions 2009

There is no clear cut way to define biogeographical regions

Udvardy, IUCN 1975

Biogeographical regions of the world: Udvardy's system

Biogeographical regions of the world: WWF

Olson et al, Bioscience 2001

Robertson and Cramer, MEPS 2009

Biogeographical regions of the world: problems at small scales

Biogeographical regions

Difficult to define

ScaleTaxonomic rank

Taxonomic group

Change over time

Very variable

Summary