Litcius/Paper detail

Environmental heterogeneity predicts global species richness patterns better than area

Kristy Udy, Matthias Fritsch, Katrin Meyer, Ingo Graß, Sebastian Hanß, Florian Härtig, Thomas Kneib, Holger Kreft, Collins B. Kukunda, Guy Pe’er, Hannah Reininghaus, Britta Tietjen, Teja Tscharntke, Clara‐Sophie van Waveren, Kerstin Wiegand

2021Global Ecology and Biogeography80 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Aim It is widely accepted that biodiversity is influenced by both niche‐related and spatial processes from local to global scales. Their relative importance, however, is still disputed, and empirical tests are surprisingly scarce at the global scale. Here, we compare the importance of area (as a proxy for pure spatial processes) and environmental heterogeneity (as a proxy for niche‐related processes) for predicting native mammal species richness world‐wide and within biogeographical regions. Location Global. Time period We analyse a spatial snapshot of richness data collated by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Major taxa studied All terrestrial mammal species, including possibly extinct species and species with uncertain presence. Methods We applied a spreading dye algorithm to analyse how native mammal species richness changes with area and environmental heterogeneity. As measures for environmental heterogeneity, we used elevation ranges and precipitation ranges, which are well‐known correlates of species richness. Results We found that environmental heterogeneity explained species richness relationships better than did area, suggesting that niche‐related processes are more prevalent than pure area effects at broad scales. Main conclusions Our results imply that niche‐related processes are essential to understand broad‐scale species–area relationships and that habitat diversity is more important than area alone for the protection of global biodiversity.

Topics & Concepts

Species richnessEcologyMacroecologyNicheBiodiversityBody size and species richnessHabitatSpatial heterogeneityGeographyMammalEcological nicheSpatial ecologyGlobal biodiversityBiodiversity hotspotBiologySpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesAnimal Ecology and Behavior Studies