Determinants of bird species richness, endemism, and island network roles in Wallacea and the West Indies: is geography sufficient or does current and historical climate matter?

Island biogeography has greatly contributed to our understanding of the processes determining species' distributions. Previous research has focused on the effects of island geography (i.e., island area, elevation, and isolation) and current climate as drivers of island species richness and ende...

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Published inEcology and evolution Vol. 4; no. 20; pp. 4019 - 4031
Main Authors Dalsgaard, Bo, Carstensen, Daniel W., Fjeldså, Jon, Maruyama, Pietro K., Rahbek, Carsten, Sandel, Brody, Sonne, Jesper, Svenning, Jens‐Christian, Wang, Zhiheng, Sutherland, William J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.10.2014
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Summary:Island biogeography has greatly contributed to our understanding of the processes determining species' distributions. Previous research has focused on the effects of island geography (i.e., island area, elevation, and isolation) and current climate as drivers of island species richness and endemism. Here, we evaluate the potential additional effects of historical climate on breeding land bird richness and endemism in Wallacea and the West Indies. Furthermore, on the basis of species distributions, we identify island biogeographical network roles and examine their association with geography, current and historical climate, and bird richness/endemism. We found that island geography, especially island area but also isolation and elevation, largely explained the variation in island species richness and endemism. Current and historical climate only added marginally to our understanding of the distribution of species on islands, and this was idiosyncratic to each archipelago. In the West Indies, endemic richness was slightly reduced on islands with historically unstable climates; weak support for the opposite was found in Wallacea. In both archipelagos, large islands with many endemics and situated far from other large islands had high importance for the linkage within modules, indicating that these islands potentially act as speciation pumps and source islands for surrounding smaller islands within the module and, thus, define the biogeographical modules. Large islands situated far from the mainland and/or with a high number of nonendemics acted as links between modules. Additionally, in Wallacea, but not in the West Indies, climatically unstable islands tended to interlink biogeographical modules. The weak and idiosyncratic effect of historical climate on island richness, endemism, and network roles indicates that historical climate had little effects on extinction‐immigration dynamics. This is in contrast to the strong effect of historical climate observed on the mainland, possibly because surrounding oceans buffer against strong climate oscillations and because geography is a strong determinant of island richness, endemism and network roles. We evaluate the potential additional effects of historical climate on native breeding land bird species richness, endemism and island network roles in Wallacea and the West Indies. We find that island geography, especially island area but also isolation and elevation, largely explained the variation in island species richness and endemism, and that island network roles are tightly linked to geography and endemism. The weak and idiosyncratic effect of historical climate on island richness, endemism and network roles indicates that historical climate had little effects on extinction‐immigration dynamics in Wallacea and the West Indies. This is in contrast to the strong effect of historical climate observed on the mainland, possibly because surrounding oceans buffer against strong climate oscillations and because geography is a strong determinant of island richness, endemism and network roles.
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Funding Information Financial support was provided by The Carlsberg Foundation (B.D.), The Danish Research Council | Natural Sciences (B.D.), The Weis-Fogh fund at Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge (B.D.), The Faculty of Science and Technology at Aarhus University and FAPESP # grant 2011/22635-2 (D.W.C.), The Danish National Research Foundation supported the Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate (B.D., J.F., P.K.M, C.R., J.S. and Z.W.), Ph.D scholarship from CNPq and a CAPES-PDSE grant to P.K.M. (processo: 99999.012341/2013-04), MADALGO – Center for Massive Data Algorithmics, a Center of the Danish National Research Foundation (B.S), Aarhus University Research Foundation via the Center for Interdisciplinary Geospatial Informatics Research – CIGIR (B.S and J-.C.S) and Arcadia (W.J.S.).
ISSN:2045-7758
2045-7758
DOI:10.1002/ece3.1276