Species richness and distribution of non-volant small mammals along an elevational gradient on a Mediterranean mountain

被引:12
作者
Krystufek, Boris [1 ]
Donev, Natasa Rezek [1 ]
Skok, Janko [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Primorska, Sci & Res Ctr, SI-6000 Koper, Slovenia
关键词
alpha-richness; biodiversity pattern; Dinaric Alps; gamma-richness; mid-domain effect; DIVERSITY; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.1515/MAMM.2010.060
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
We explored the alpha and gamma patterns in species richness of non-volant small mammals on Mt. Sneznik (sea level: 1796 m) on the northern edge of the Mediterranean Basin. A total of 2871 individuals were sampled belonging to 23 different species of rodents and soricomorphs. Two estimates of true species richness (sample-based rarefaction and abundance-based coverage estimator of species richness, ACE) yielded very similar values to empirical data. The empirical number of species varied between 4 and 11 per station in alpha-richness and between 5 and 17 per 200 m elevational interval in gamma-richness. The 95% confidence intervals for ACE overlapped between elevations in both data sets, hence not a single sampling site or elevational interval emerged statistically richest or poorest in the number of species. The two patterns responded to elevation in a very different way but any of the curves was decidedly humped. The mid-domain effect predictions failed to reproduce the pattern of observed or estimated species richness, and hence the ranges were located non-randomly along the elevational gradient. The pattern of distribution and diversity is supposedly generated by the environmental variables correlated to the elevation, which vary in a non-random manner with elevation.
引用
收藏
页码:3 / 11
页数:9
相关论文
共 40 条
[1]   Species richness, rarity and endemicity of European mammals:: a biogeographical approach [J].
Baquero, RA ;
Tellería, JL .
BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2001, 10 (01) :29-44
[2]   The role of environment and mid-domain effect on moth species richness along a tropical elevational gradient [J].
Brehm, Gunnar ;
Colwell, Robert K. ;
Kluge, Juergen .
GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2007, 16 (02) :205-219
[3]   Mammals on mountainsides: elevational patterns of diversity [J].
Brown, JH .
GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2001, 10 (01) :101-109
[4]   Vascular epiphyte distribution patterns:: explaining the mid-elevation richness peak [J].
Cardelús, CL ;
Colwell, RK ;
Watkins, JE .
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2006, 94 (01) :144-156
[5]   A new statistical approach for assessing similarity of species composition with incidence and abundance data [J].
Chao, A ;
Chazdon, RL ;
Colwell, RK ;
Shen, TJ .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2005, 8 (02) :148-159
[6]   The mid-domain effect: geometric constraints on the geography of species richness [J].
Colwell, RK ;
Lees, DC .
TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2000, 15 (02) :70-76
[7]   NONBIOLOGICAL GRADIENTS IN SPECIES RICHNESS AND A SPURIOUS RAPOPORT EFFECT [J].
COLWELL, RK ;
HURTT, GC .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1994, 144 (04) :570-595
[8]   The mid-domain effect and species richness patterns: What have we learned so far? [J].
Colwell, RK ;
Rahbek, C ;
Gotelli, NJ .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2004, 163 (03) :E1-E23
[9]  
Colwell RK, 2006, ESTIMATES STAT ESTIM
[10]  
Colwell RK, 2005, RANGEMODEL MONTE CAR