Smith Val H, Foster Bryan L, Grover James P, Holt Robert D, Leibold Mathew A, Denoyelles Frank
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2005 Mar 22;102(12):4393-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0500094102. Epub 2005 Mar 7.
Species-area relationships have been observed for virtually all major groups of macroorganisms that have been studied to date but have not been explored for microscopic phytoplankton algae, which are the dominant producers in many freshwater and marine ecosystems. Our analyses of data from 142 different natural ponds, lakes, and oceans and 239 experimental ecosystems reveal a strong species-area relationship with an exponent that is invariant across ecosystems that span >15 orders of magnitude in spatial extent. A striking result is that the species-area relationship derived from small-scale experimental studies correctly scales up to natural aquatic ecosystems. These results significantly broaden our knowledge of the effects of island size on biodiversity and also confirm the relevance of experimentally derived data to the analysis and understanding of larger-scale ecological patterns. In addition, they confirm that patterns in microbial diversity are strongly consistent with those that have been repeatedly reported in the literature for macroorganisms.
迄今为止,几乎所有已研究的主要大型生物类群都观察到了物种 - 面积关系,但对于微型浮游植物藻类尚未进行探索,而微型浮游植物藻类是许多淡水和海洋生态系统中的主要生产者。我们对来自142个不同天然池塘、湖泊和海洋以及239个实验生态系统的数据进行分析,发现了一种强烈的物种 - 面积关系,其指数在跨越超过15个数量级空间范围的生态系统中保持不变。一个惊人的结果是,从小规模实验研究得出的物种 - 面积关系能够正确地扩展到自然水生生态系统。这些结果显著拓宽了我们对岛屿大小对生物多样性影响的认识,也证实了实验得出的数据对于分析和理解更大尺度生态模式的相关性。此外,它们证实了微生物多样性模式与文献中多次报道的大型生物的模式高度一致。