Data

Data from: Limits to species richness in terrestrial communities

Macquarie University
John Alroy (Aggregated by)
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.5061/dryad.8f8g581&rft.title=Data from: Limits to species richness in terrestrial communities&rft.identifier=https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.8f8g581&rft.publisher=Macquarie University&rft.description=Are communities limited by biotic interactions, or are they random draws from regional species pools? One way to tell is to compare total species counts in geographic regions to average counts in ecological samples falling within those regions. If species richness is limited regionally, then the relationship should be curvilinear even in a log-log space. Local data pertaining to trees and 10 groups of animals are analyzed to test this hypothesis. Most relationships are indeed curvilinear. To explain these patterns, a simple model is proposed that invokes biotic interaction-limited speciation or immigration rates combined with extinction or extirpation rates that fall as the number of occupied patches increases. Local and regional richness come into balance as the rates trade off, causing global richness to also be limited. Surprisingly, however, the data for trees break the pattern, suggesting that the great adaptive radiation of seed plants may still be unfolding. Usage Notes ReferencesReferences to publications yielding Ecological Register data recordslimits_to_species_richness_references.tar.gzRegistersEcological Register data files for ants, bats, birds, butterflies, dung beetles, frogs, large mammals, lizards, mosquitoes, small mammals, and treeslimits_to_species_richness_registers.tar.gz&rft.creator=John Alroy&rft.date=2023&rft_rights=CC0&rft_subject=Rodentia&rft_subject=Carnivora&rft_subject=global biodiversity&rft_subject=local-regional comparisons&rft_subject=Chiroptera&rft_subject=Primates&rft_subject=patch occupancy models&rft_subject=Plantae&rft_subject=squares estimator&rft_subject=Rhopalocera&rft_subject=Culicidae&rft_subject=Squamata&rft_subject=Scarabaeoidea&rft_subject=Other education not elsewhere classified&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Licence & Rights:

view details

CC0

Access:

Other

Full description

Are communities limited by biotic interactions, or are they random draws from regional species pools? One way to tell is to compare total species counts in geographic regions to average counts in ecological samples falling within those regions. If species richness is limited regionally, then the relationship should be curvilinear even in a log-log space. Local data pertaining to trees and 10 groups of animals are analyzed to test this hypothesis. Most relationships are indeed curvilinear. To explain these patterns, a simple model is proposed that invokes biotic interaction-limited speciation or immigration rates combined with extinction or extirpation rates that fall as the number of occupied patches increases. Local and regional richness come into balance as the rates trade off, causing global richness to also be limited. Surprisingly, however, the data for trees break the pattern, suggesting that the great adaptive radiation of seed plants may still be unfolding.

Usage Notes

ReferencesReferences to publications yielding Ecological Register data recordslimits_to_species_richness_references.tar.gzRegistersEcological Register data files for ants, bats, birds, butterflies, dung beetles, frogs, large mammals, lizards, mosquitoes, small mammals, and treeslimits_to_species_richness_registers.tar.gz

Issued: 2019-08-13

Created: 2022-06-10

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph
Subjects

User Contributed Tags    

Login to tag this record with meaningful keywords to make it easier to discover

Identifiers