Essig Museum of Entomology and Environmental Science Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3114, USA.
Trends Ecol Evol. 2012 Jan;27(1):47-56. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2011.08.009. Epub 2011 Oct 17.
Tests of hypotheses about the biogeographical consequences of long-distance dispersal have long eluded biologists, largely because of the rarity and presumed unpredictability of such events. Here, we examine data for terrestrial (including littoral) organisms in the Pacific to show that knowledge of dispersal by wind, birds and oceanic drift or rafting, coupled with information about the natural environment and biology of the organisms, can be used to generate broad biogeographic predictions. We then examine the predictions in the context of the origin, frequency of arrival and location of establishment of dispersed organisms, as well as subsequent patterns of endemism and diversification on remote islands. The predicted patterns are being increasingly supported by phylogenetic data for both terrestrial and littoral organisms.
长期以来,生物学家一直难以对远距离扩散的生物地理后果进行假设检验,这主要是因为此类事件的稀有性和可预测性低。在这里,我们检查了太平洋地区陆地(包括滨海)生物的数据,结果表明,了解风、鸟类和海洋漂移或漂浮的扩散方式,再加上有关生物体的自然环境和生物学的信息,可以用来生成广泛的生物地理预测。然后,我们根据分散生物体的起源、到达频率和建立地点以及随后在偏远岛屿上的特有性和多样化模式来检验这些预测。对于陆地和滨海生物,系统发育数据越来越支持这些预测模式。