4.4 Article

Biogeographic affinity helps explain productivity-richness relationships at regional and local scales

期刊

AMERICAN NATURALIST
卷 170, 期 -, 页码 S5-S15

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UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/519010

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species diversity; species richness; productivity; niche conservatism; regional and local richness; serpentine; plants

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The unresolved question of what causes the observed positive relationship between large- scale productivity and species richness has long interested ecologists and evolutionists. Here we examine a potential explanation that we call the biogeographic affinity hypothesis, which proposes that the productivity- richness relationship is a function of species' climatic tolerances that in turn are shaped by the earth's climatic history combined with evolutionary niche conservatism. Using botanical data from regions and sites across California, we find support for a key prediction of this hypothesis, namely, that the productivity - species richness relationship differs strongly and predictably among groups of higher taxa on the basis of their biogeographic affinities ( i. e., between families or genera primarily associated with north- temperate, semiarid, or desert zones). We also show that a consideration of biogeographic affinity can yield new insights on how productivity- richness patterns at large geographic scales filter down to affect patterns of species richness and composition within local communities.

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