4.6 Article

Odonates in warm regions of south america largely do not follow Rapoport's rule

期刊

BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
卷 31, 期 2, 页码 565-584

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-021-02350-0

关键词

Amazon rainforest; Aquatic insects; Diversity gradients; Geographic range; Macroecology; Odonata; Ecogeography

资金

  1. CIKEL Ltd
  2. BRC Consortium
  3. Santa Cruz State University-UESC [PROP 00220.1100.1922]
  4. IPAM
  5. PELD/CNPq [23038.000452/2017-16]
  6. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [305542/2010-9, 307836/2019-3, 304710/2019-9]
  7. CAPES, through PROCAD-AMAZONIA/CAPES [88881.474457/2020-01]
  8. European Union [854248]
  9. CNPq [154761/2018-4]
  10. Biodiversity in Oriental Amazon Research Program (PPBio)
  11. Hydro Alunorte Company

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study explores the distribution patterns of Neotropical odonates and finds a Rapoport effect in the Amazon biome and an inverse Rapoport effect in the Amazon-Cerrado Transition Forest and Cerrado biome. Regarding the Latitudinal Diversity Gradient (LDG), there is no significant correlation between species richness patterns and latitude for all species, but there is a significant relationship between species richness and latitude for zygopterans.
One of the major challenges of ecologists and biogeographers is to understand how species are globally distributed. Two of the most well-studied large-scale patterns in species distributions are the Rapoport's rule and the Latitudinal Diversity Gradient (LDG). We aimed to address whether Neotropical odonates follow the Rapoport's rule and if there is a latitudinal gradient in species diversity. A total of 1076 records for 190 species, covering a large area from southeastern to the northern regions of Brazil that extends from 23 degrees S (Cerrado) to 3 degrees N (Amazon Rainforest). Generalized Linear Models were used to address whether Neotropical odonates follow the Rapoport's rule, and if there is a latitudinal gradient in species diversity, based on our predictions. We found a Rapoport effect in the Amazon biome and an inverse Rapoport effect in the Amazon-Cerrado Transition Forest and Cerrado biome. Regarding LDG, we found no significant effect of latitude on species richness patterns when we considered all the species, and a significant relationship between species richness and latitude for zygopterans. The spatial patterns of odonates geographic distribution may be an outcome of geographical barriers, for instance, the continental geometry of South America, which is broader in the north and limits geographical expansion towards the south. Furthermore, species ecophysiological mechanisms may also hamper their expansion and drive the pattern observed in our study, mainly because of evolutionary thermoregulatory adaptations that each taxon exhibits along its environmental gradient.

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