Jetz Walter, Rahbek Carsten
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK.
Science. 2002 Aug 30;297(5586):1548-51. doi: 10.1126/science.1072779.
Geographic patterns in species richness are mainly based on wide-ranging species because their larger number of distribution records has a disproportionate contribution to the species richness counts. Here we demonstrate how this effect strongly influences our understanding of what determines species richness. Using both conventional and spatial regression models, we show that for sub-Saharan African birds, the apparent role of productivity diminishes with decreasing range size, whereas the significance of topographic heterogeneity increases. The relative importance of geometric constraints from the continental edge is moderate. Our findings highlight the failure of traditional species richness models to account for narrow-ranging species that frequently are also threatened.
物种丰富度的地理格局主要基于分布广泛的物种,因为它们大量的分布记录对物种丰富度计数的贡献不成比例。在这里,我们展示了这种效应如何强烈影响我们对决定物种丰富度因素的理解。使用传统和空间回归模型,我们表明,对于撒哈拉以南非洲的鸟类,生产力的明显作用随着分布范围大小的减小而减弱,而地形异质性的重要性增加。来自大陆边缘的几何约束的相对重要性适中。我们的研究结果凸显了传统物种丰富度模型未能考虑到那些经常也受到威胁的分布范围狭窄的物种。