Department of Biology, University of British Columbia Okanagan, 1177 Research Road, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada V1V 1V7.
School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 600, Wellington 6012, New Zealand.
Proc Biol Sci. 2023 Jan 25;290(1991):20222084. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2022.2084. Epub 2023 Jan 18.
For decades, biogeographers have sought a better understanding of how organisms are distributed among islands. However, the island biogeography of humans remains largely unknown. Here, we investigate how human population size varies among 486 islands at two spatial scales. At a global scale, we tested whether population size increases with island area and declines with island elevation and nearest mainland, as is common in non-human species, or whether humans escape such biogeographic constraints. At a regional scale, we tested whether population sizes vary among islands within archipelagos according to the positioning of different cultural source pools. Results illustrate that on a global scale, human populations increased in size with island area, similar to non-human species, yet they did not decline in size with elevation and distance to nearest mainland. At a regional scale, human population size often varied among islands within archipelagos relative to the location of different cultural source pools. Despite broad-scale similarities in the geographical distribution of human and non-human species among islands, results from this study indicate that the island biogeography of humans may also be influenced by archipelago-specific social, political and historical circumstances.
几十年来,生物地理学家一直试图更好地理解生物在岛屿之间的分布方式。然而,人类的岛屿生物地理学在很大程度上仍然未知。在这里,我们研究了人类人口规模在两个空间尺度上的 486 个岛屿之间是如何变化的。在全球尺度上,我们测试了人口规模是否随岛屿面积的增加而增加,随岛屿海拔和最近大陆的距离的增加而减少,这在非人类物种中很常见,或者人类是否逃避了这种生物地理限制。在区域尺度上,我们测试了在群岛内的岛屿上,人口规模是否根据不同文化源池的定位而有所不同。结果表明,在全球尺度上,人类种群的规模随岛屿面积的增加而增加,与非人类物种相似,但它们的规模不会随海拔和与最近大陆的距离的增加而减少。在区域尺度上,人类种群的规模在群岛内的岛屿之间通常会因不同文化源池的位置而有所不同。尽管人类和非人类物种在岛屿之间的地理分布上存在广泛的相似性,但本研究的结果表明,人类的岛屿生物地理学也可能受到群岛特定的社会、政治和历史环境的影响。