Scale effects on the body size frequency distributions of African birds: patterns and potential mechanisms

被引:10
作者
Coetzee, Bernard W. T. [1 ]
le Roux, Peter C. [1 ]
Chown, Steven L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Stellenbosch, Dept Bot & Zool, Ctr Invas Biol, ZA-7602 Matieland, South Africa
来源
GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY | 2013年 / 22卷 / 04期
基金
新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
African avifauna; African birds; body mass; body size; range size; scaling effects; NORTH-AMERICAN; EXTINCTION RISK; FRESH-WATER; RANGE SIZE; ECOLOGY; DIVERSITY; ASSEMBLAGES; ENERGY; MASS; BIG;
D O I
10.1111/j.1466-8238.2012.00793.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Aim To describe and analyse the body size frequency distributions (BSFDs) of avian assemblages at several spatial scales in the Afrotropics. We also tested if the variation in median body size across assemblages at different spatial scales was related to environmental variables and whether purely stochastic processes could explain BSFDs. Location The Afrotropical biogeographic realm. Methods Avian body masses for 1960 species where analysed at continental, biome, ecoregion and local spatial scales with standard metrics. Variation in median assemblage body size was modelled as a function of environmental and spatial explanatory variables to assess non-random assemblage structure. We tested if BSFDs of smaller spatial scale distributions are random subsets of the larger spatial scale assemblages in which they are embedded, and used three different null model randomizations to investigate the influence of stochastic processes on BSFDs. Results The African avifauna's continental BSFD is unimodal and right-skewed. BSFDs generally become less skewed and less modal with decreasing spatial scale. The best-fit model explained 71% of median body size values at the ecoregion scale as a function of latitude, latitude2, longitude, species richness and species range size. BSFDs at smaller scales show non-random assembly from larger scale BSFDs distributions. Main conclusion African avifaunal BSFDs are quantitatively dissimilar to African mammal BSFDs, which are bimodal at all spatial scales. Much of the change in median body size with spatial scale can be captured by a range-weighted null model, suggesting that differential turnover between smaller- and larger-bodied species might explain the shift in the central tendency of the BSFD. At the local scale, energy may well contribute to structuring BSFDs, but this pattern is less pronounced at larger spatial scales.
引用
收藏
页码:380 / 390
页数:11
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