Harvard College, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011;6(11):e28045. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028045. Epub 2011 Nov 29.
Many studies have examined how island biogeography affects diversity on the scale of island systems. In this study, we address how diversity varies over very short periods of time on individual islands. To do this, we compile an inventory of the ants living in the Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area, Boston, Massachusetts, USA using data from a five-year All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory of the region's arthropods. Consistent with the classical theory of island biogeography, species richness increased with island size, decreased with island isolation, and remained relatively constant over time. Additionally, our inventory finds that almost half of the known Massachusetts ant fauna can be collected in the BHI, and identifies four new species records for Massachusetts, including one new to the United States, Myrmica scabrinodis. We find that the number of species actually active on islands depended greatly on the timescale under consideration. The species that could be detected during any given week of sampling could by no means account for total island species richness, even when correcting for sampling effort. Though we consistently collected the same number of species over any given week of sampling, the identities of those species varied greatly between weeks. This variation does not result from local immigration and extinction of species, nor from seasonally-driven changes in the abundance of individual species, but rather from weekly changes in the distribution and activity of foraging ants. This variation can be upwards of 50% of ant species per week. This suggests that numerous ant species on the BHI share the same physical space at different times. This temporal partitioning could well explain such unexpectedly high ant diversity in an isolated, urban site.
许多研究都探讨了岛屿生物地理学如何影响岛屿系统范围内的多样性。在本研究中,我们探讨了个体岛屿上非常短的时间内多样性如何变化。为此,我们利用该地区节肢动物五年全类群生物多样性清查的数据,编制了美国马萨诸塞州波士顿港群岛国家娱乐区(Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area)内蚂蚁的名录。与岛屿生物地理学的经典理论一致,物种丰富度随岛屿面积的增加而增加,随岛屿隔离度的增加而减少,并且随时间保持相对稳定。此外,我们的清查发现,在 BHI 中可以收集到已知马萨诸塞州蚂蚁区系的近一半,并且确定了马萨诸塞州的四个新物种记录,包括一种在美国新发现的蚂蚁,Myrmica scabrinodis。我们发现,实际上在岛屿上活跃的物种数量在很大程度上取决于所考虑的时间尺度。在任何给定的采样周内可以检测到的物种绝不能说明岛屿的总物种丰富度,即使在考虑采样工作的情况下也是如此。尽管我们在任何给定的采样周内始终收集相同数量的物种,但这些物种的身份在不同周之间差异很大。这种变化不是由于物种的局部迁入和灭绝,也不是由于个别物种丰度的季节性变化,而是由于觅食蚂蚁的分布和活动每周都在变化。这种变化每周可达 50%以上的蚂蚁物种。这表明 BHI 上的许多蚂蚁物种在不同时间共享相同的物理空间。这种时间上的分区可以很好地解释在一个孤立的城市地区如此高的蚂蚁多样性。