Posgrado en Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Mérida, México.
Laboratorio de Ecología Geográfica, Unidad Académica Sisal, Facultad de Ciencias, Unidad de Conservación de la Biodiversidad, Parque Científico y Tecnológico de Yucatán, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mérida, Yucatán, México.
PLoS One. 2024 Jul 9;19(7):e0306832. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0306832. eCollection 2024.
Species' range size is a fundamental unit of analysis in biodiversity research, given its association with extinction risk and species richness. One of its most notable patterns is its positive relationship with latitude, which has been considered an ecogeographical rule called Rapoport's rule. Despite this rule being confirmed for various taxonomic groups, its validity has been widely discussed and several taxa still lack a formal assessment. Different hypotheses have been proposed to explain their potential mechanisms, with those related to temperature and elevational being the most supported thus far. In this study, we employed two level of analyses (cross-species and assemblage) to investigate the validity of Rapoport's rule in spiny lizards (genus Sceloporus). Additionally, we evaluated four environmental-related hypotheses (minimum temperature, temperature variability, temperature stability since the last glacial maximum, and elevation) posed to explain such pattern, contrasting our results to those patterns expected under a null model of range position. Our results provided support for Rapoport's rule at both levels of analyses, contrasting with null expectations. Consistently, minimum temperature and elevation were the most relevant variables explaining the spatial variation in range size. At the cross-species level, our null simulations revealed that both variables deviated significantly from random expectations. Conversely, at the assemblage level, none of the variables were statistically different from the expected relationships. We discussed the implication of our findings in relation to the ecology and evolution of spiny lizards.
物种的分布范围大小是生物多样性研究的一个基本分析单位,因为它与灭绝风险和物种丰富度有关。它最显著的模式之一是与纬度呈正相关,这被认为是一个生态地理规律,称为拉波波特法则。尽管这一规律已被证实适用于各种分类群,但它的有效性仍存在广泛争议,一些分类群仍然缺乏正式评估。已经提出了不同的假说来解释其潜在机制,其中与温度和海拔相关的假说迄今为止得到了最多的支持。在这项研究中,我们采用了两种分析水平(种间和集合)来调查 Rapoport 法则在刺蜥蜴(Sceloporus 属)中的有效性。此外,我们评估了四个与环境相关的假说(最低温度、温度变异性、自末次冰期以来的温度稳定性以及海拔),以解释这种模式,将我们的结果与在范围位置的零模型下预期的模式进行对比。我们的结果在两种分析水平上都支持 Rapoport 法则,与零假设预期形成对比。一致地,最低温度和海拔是解释分布范围大小空间变化的最相关变量。在种间水平上,我们的零假设模拟表明,这两个变量都明显偏离了随机预期。相反,在集合水平上,没有一个变量在统计学上与预期的关系有显著差异。我们讨论了我们的发现与刺蜥蜴的生态学和进化之间的关系。