Journal
ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 495-504Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.12753
Keywords
Dispersal; flora; Galapagos; habitat filtering; oceanic islands; phylogenetic structure; species assembly
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Funding
- SENESCYT-Ecuador scholarship
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Remote locations, such as oceanic islands, typically harbour relatively few species, some of which go on to generate endemic radiations. Species colonising these locations tend to be a non-random subset from source communities, which is thought to reflect dispersal limitation. However, nonrandom colonisation could also result from habitat filtering, whereby only a few continental species can become established. We evaluate the imprints of these processes on the Galapagos flora by analysing a comprehensive regional phylogeny for similar to 39 000 species alongside information on dispersal strategies and climatic suitability. We found that habitat filtering was more important than dispersal limitation in determining species composition. This finding may help explain why adaptive radiation is common on oceanic archipelagoes -because colonising species can be relatively poor dispersers with specific niche requirements. We suggest that the standard assumption that plant communities in remote locations are primarily shaped by dispersal limitation deserves reconsideration.
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