Journal
NATURE
Volume 421, Issue 6926, Pages 933-936Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nature01393
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A central aim of ecology is to explain the heterogeneous distribution of biodiversity on earth. As expectations of diversity loss grow(1-5), this understanding is also critical for effective management and conservation. Although explanations for biodiversity patterns are still a matter for intense debate(5), they have often been considered to be scale-dependent(6,7). At large geographical scales, biogeographers have suggested that variation in species richness results from factors such as area, temperature, environmental stability, and geological processes, among many others(5,7-14). From the species pools generated by these large-scale processes, community ecologists have suggested that local-scale assembly of communities is achieved through processes such as competition, predation, recruitment, disturbances and immigration(5-8,15,16). Here we analyse hypotheses on speciation and dispersal for reef fish from the Indian and Pacific oceans and show how dispersal from a major centre of origination can simultaneously account for both large-scale gradients in species richness and the structure of local communities.
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