Literature DB >> 27147094

Unifying latitudinal gradients in range size and richness across marine and terrestrial systems.

Adam Tomašových1, Jonathan D Kennedy2, Tristan J Betzner3, Nicole Bitler Kuehnle3, Stewart Edie3, Sora Kim3, K Supriya4, Alexander E White5, Carsten Rahbek6, Shan Huang7, Trevor D Price8, David Jablonski9.   

Abstract

Many marine and terrestrial clades show similar latitudinal gradients in species richness, but opposite gradients in range size-on land, ranges are the smallest in the tropics, whereas in the sea, ranges are the largest in the tropics. Therefore, richness gradients in marine and terrestrial systems do not arise from a shared latitudinal arrangement of species range sizes. Comparing terrestrial birds and marine bivalves, we find that gradients in range size are concordant at the level of genera. Here, both groups show a nested pattern in which narrow-ranging genera are confined to the tropics and broad-ranging genera extend across much of the gradient. We find that (i) genus range size and its variation with latitude is closely associated with per-genus species richness and (ii) broad-ranging genera contain more species both within and outside of the tropics when compared with tropical- or temperate-only genera. Within-genus species diversification thus promotes genus expansion to novel latitudes. Despite underlying differences in the species range-size gradients, species-rich genera are more likely to produce a descendant that extends its range relative to the ancestor's range. These results unify species richness gradients with those of genera, implying that birds and bivalves share similar latitudinal dynamics in net species diversification.
© 2016 The Author(s).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Rapoport's rule; biogeography; latitudinal diversity gradient; range expansion; species–genus ratio

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27147094      PMCID: PMC4874701          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2015.3027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  38 in total

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10.  On the processes generating latitudinal richness gradients: identifying diagnostic patterns and predictions.

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  9 in total

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8.  Ecological drivers of global gradients in avian dispersal inferred from wing morphology.

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9.  Global patterns and a latitudinal gradient of flower disparity: perspectives from the angiosperm order Ericales.

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  9 in total

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