4.7 Article

Phylogenetic diversity-area curves

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 93, Issue 8, Pages S31-S43

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/11-0435.1

Keywords

Anolis; elevation; environmental gradient; island biogeography; Mt. Hood, Oregon, USA; phylogenetic community structure; phylogeny; random placement; spatial scale; species area relationship; species richness; species sorting

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB 0816613, DBI 0906011]
  2. Division Of Environmental Biology
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences [0816613] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Phylogenetic diversity-area curves are analogous to species-area curves and quantify the relationship between the phylogenetic diversity of species assemblages and the area over which assemblages are sampled. Here, we developed theoretical expectations of these curves under different ecological and macroevolutionary processes. We first used simulations to generate curves expected under three ecological community assembly processes: species sorting, where species have distinct environmental preferences; random placement, where species have no environmental preference but vary in their prevalence across communities; and limited dispersal, where species have no environmental preference but vary in their ability to disperse. Second, we simulated curves expected across regions (e.g., across oceanic islands) that are derived from colonization among regions, within-region speciation, and extinction. We also computed curves for two data sets, one on forest plots along an elevation gradient and the other on Caribbean island Anolis lizards. Of the three ecological processes, only species sorting produced strong relationships between phylogenetic diversity and area. The forest plot curves matched the species-sorting expectation, but only when phylogenetic repulsion (that caused closely related species to be found in similar habitats but not in the same plots) was also included in the simulation. Strong relationships between regional phylogenetic diversity and area were simulated if species were derived only from within-region speciation; colonizations among regions obscured the pattern. Similarly, larger Caribbean islands had more within-island speciation and contained more Anolis phylogenetic diversity than smaller islands, but colonizations among islands obscured this relationship. This work furthers our understanding of the processes that govern the phylogenetic diversity of ecological communities and biogeographic regions.

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