Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Tropical ecology Tropical biodiversity: species richness, diversity of life strategies (January Weiner) READINGS J. Weiner, "śycie i ewolucja biosfery", 2nd ed/ PWN (2003) Rozdz. 11 Part Two Chapters 4 - 7 2009 1992 2010 1999 Simon & Schuster 1984, 1985 (appr. $10 at Amazon.com) Princeton University Press 1997 2005 Journal papers • Willig MR, Kaufman DM, Stevens RD (2003): Latitudinal gradients of biodiversity: pattern, process, scale and synthesis. Annu. Rev. Ecol. Evol. Syst. 34: 273-309 • Turner JRG (2004): Explaining the global biodiversity gradient: energy, area, history and natural selection. Basic and Applied Ecology 5: 435-445 • Mittelbach GG et al. (2007): Evolution and the latitudinal diversity gradient: speciation, extinction and biogeography. Ecology Letters, 10: 315–331 Classic text to read: Joseph H. Connel, 1978: Diversity in Tropical Rain Forests and Coral Reefs Science, V. 199, 4335: 1302-1310 Problems: • Clinal variation of biotic diversity on Earth • Hypotheses explaining species richness in the tropics • Adaptive strategies of tropical biota Problems: • Clinal variation of biotic diversity on Earth • Hypotheses explaining species richness in the tropics • Adaptive strategies of tropical biota Alfred Russel Wallace (1823 – 1913) Darwin, Wallace and others: • Adaptations in temperate zone depend on abiotic factors (climate); • In the tropics – on the interactions between organisms; • Fischer (1960): [therefore in the tropics] faster differentiation, more quiet time... Global diversity of vascular plants Kier et al. 2005 AVAILABILITY ADN QUALITY OF DATA CONCERNING PLANT DIVERSITY Kier et al. 2005 Number of species per 10000 km2 <100 100-200 200-400 400-1000 1000-1500 1600-2000 2000-3000 3000-4000 4000-6000 >5000 Latitudinal diversity gradient of fossil Foraminifera (after Stehli et al. 1969) LATITUDINAL GRADIENT OF FAMILY RICHNESS Vascular plants Reptiles Amphibians Mammals Gaston et al.. 1995 LATITUDINAL GRADIENT OF SPECIES (a) AND GENERIC (b) RICHNESS OF BIVALVES (Flessa & Jablonski 1995) Latitudinal gradient of extant species of corals (Fraser & Currie 1996) Taxonomic diversity of the tropics: Phyla ONLY OCEANIC TERRESTRIAL AND AQUATIC • • • • • • • Annelida Arthropoda Chordata Mollusca Nematoda Platyhelminthes Rotifera ONLY TERRESTRIAL • Onychophora • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Acanthocephala Brachiopoda Bryozoa Cnidaria Ctenophora Echinodermata Echiura Ectoprocta Gastrotricha Kinoryncha Loricifera Nemertea Phoronida Pogonophora Porifera Priapulida Sippuncula BIRDS OF POLAND: 227 breeding specoes (Tomiałojć & Stawarczyk 2003) Birds of Venezuela: 1382 species (Hilty, 2003) CLOUD FOREST IN VENEZUELA (Rancho Grande) Number of plant species in equatorial forests (after Primack i Corlett, 2005) Region Neotropics Number of species 93500 Africa (land) 16000 Madagascar 4000 Africa total 20000 Malaysia 45000 Indochina etc. 10000 S. India 4000 Sri Lanka 1000 Australia 700 Pacific Islands Total Asia and Pacific Total Area forested (mln ha) 400 180 1000 61700 250 175200 830 Number of tree species per ha in rain forests of different continents Primack i Corlett 2005 Other data Gentry 1988: 580 trees of 283 species/ha (Amazon, border of Venezuela and Brasil) Region West Indies, Mexico, Central and South America No. sp. 2233 North America, North of Mexico USA Europe Africa (sub-saharan) Asia (parts of this region) 585 400 429 2500 2080 New Guinea, New Britian and New Ireland Australia New Zealand Polynesia TOTAL 275 1100 23 42 9667 Species diversity of ants in various regions From Holldobler and Wilson (1991) and Groombridge (1992). Number of coral genera in frelation to surface temperature of the see (Fraser & Currie 1996) DIFFICULTIES WITH BIODIVERSITY MEASUREMENT • How to measure species number with regard to area? (ecoregions, latitudinal zones, longitudinal belts, meridian, maps with species density contours) • The majority of tropical species are not known yet! Okapi (Okapia johnstoni) Giraffidae discovered in Congo in 1900 Pseudoryx nghetinhensis 1992 wstawić przyrost l. gat. ptaków (jak w podręczniku) odkrywane ostatnio gatunki (liczby, przykłady, antylopa z Wietnamu, ośmiornice głębinowe Wollemia nobilis Anonymus 1999 (Araukariaceae); discovered in Australia : 1994 T.L.Erwin ERWIN’S ESTIMATE OF THE TOTAL SPECIES RICHNESS 19 trees Luehea seemani (Panama) fumigated species of beetles collected .................................1200 Assumption 1: Average specifity of beetles = 13.5% ergo: No. of specialised species .............................163 Assumption 2: 50000 tree species in rein forests, on each specialised species of beetles ergo: total No. of species specialised .......... 8150000 Assumption 3: Beetles make up 40% spesies of arthropods ergo: No. of arthropod species ................... 20000000 Assumption 4: 2 × more species in tree canopies than on forest floor ergo: total No. of species in rain forest ............ 30 mln Problems: • Clinal variation of biotic diversity on Earth • Hypotheses explaining species richness in the tropics • Adaptive strategies of tropical biota LATITUDINAL BIODIVERSITY GRADIENTS ARE UNIVERSAL Hillebrand, 2004: meta-analysys of 600 data sets confirms gradient properties: • at regional scale are stronger and steeper than at local one; • strength and steepness increases with body size of the group studied; • strength increases with trophic level; • taxonomic effect (poikilo- vs. homeotherms); • in freshwater environments weaker than in marine and terrestrial ones; • differs between continents and environments; • hemispheres (S or N) do not matter. HISTORY OF THE RESEARCH CONCERNING THE GEOGRAPHY OF SPECIES DIFERSITY • • • • • • Wallace 1878 Dobzhanski 1950 Hutchinson 1959 MacArthur (et all.) 1965, 1969, 1972 Pianka 1966 RECENT REVIEWS (WITH NEW HYPOTHESES) – Rosenzweig 1992 – Brown 1988 – Currie 1991 – Rohde 1992 – Wright, Currie & Maurer 1993 – Turner, Lennon & Greenwood 1996 – Fraser & Currie 1996 – Rohde 1999 – Kaspari et al. 2000 – Willig et al. 2003 – Turner 2004 – Mittelbach et al. 2007 SPECIATION LIMBO EXTINCTION evolutionary time scale history = randomness SPECIES POOL dispersal limitation environmental filtering interactions LOCAL COMMUNITY Continental spatial scale „ASSEMBLY RULES” SUCCESSION ecological time scale MAJOR APPROACHES AND CONTROVERSIES • Neutral theories (MacArthur & Wilson, Hubbell) • Niche-based theories (competition, specialization) • Equilibrium vs. Non-equilibrum communities GROUPS OF HYPOTHESES ECOLOGICAL FACTORS (carrying capacity) VARIOUS RATE OF SPECIES DIFFERENTIATION (speciation and extinction) MORE TIME FOR DIFFERENTIATION IN THE TROPICS Mittelbach et al. 2007 EVOLUTIONARY HYPOTHESES CONC. BIODIVERSITY GRADIENT Differentiation rate similar, but more time in the tropics: 1. Tropical environments are older, many extant clades originated there 2. Clade dispersal from the tropics is limited and only recent Differentiation rate in the tropics is higher... ...because speciation is faster 1. Genetic drift in small populations 2. Climatic changes accelerate speciation 3. Higher likeness of para- and sympatric speciation 4. Larger area of the tropics – more chances for isolation 5. Narrower physiological tolerance of tropical biota 6. Higher temperature accelerates evolution 7. Stronger interactions – narrower specialisation and faster speciation ...because extinction rate is lower 1. Stable climate 2. Larger area – more numerous populations – lower risk of extinction Most important hypotheses explaining geographical biodiversity gradient • • • • • • • • Geographical area History Productivity Environmental energy Rapoport’s rule The rate of evolution Geometric limitation Continuous disturbance Geographical area (Terborgh; Rosenzweig) • The geometry of the globe implies that the area of equatorial zone is the largest; • This area is thermally most uniform and stable; • The number of species increases with area; • Large area has more diverse habitats. Rosenzweig 1995 SPECIES RICHNESS (S) IN RELATION TO THE SURFACE AREA (A) S = cAz log S = log c + z log A NUMBER OF TREE SPECIES IN RELATION TO ISLAND AREA (AUSTRALIA) LARGER AREAS OF RAIN FORESTS MAINTAINT MORE PRIMATE SPECIES Primack i Corlett 2005) NUMBER OF PRIMATE SPECIES CORRELATES ALSO WITH RAINFALL (EXCEPT FOR ASIA) Primack i Corlett 2005 THE EFFECT OF LATITUDE UPON „species-area” RELATION Lyons & Willig 2002 • data: marsupials and bats of Americas • relation: S = C Az where S = species number, A = area C, z = parameters log S 1 2 3 C1 > C2 z2 > z3 log A pasami kwadratami 1. A clear latitudinal gradient of z (Lyons & Willig 2002) 1. A clear latitudinal gradient of C (Lyons & Willig 2002) Conclusions: • Biotic diversity in the tropics is higher but less dependent on area; • This effect should be taken into account at any comparisons; log S tropics other log A HISTORY (Rosenzweig) • Tropical area was not subjected to deep climatic changes during a long time; • Climatic changes caused fragmentation of typical tropical environments (rain forests) and enhanced speciation; • In the tropics the number of species increases with time (many old taxons). The extent of recent glaciation, 18000 y. ago CHANGES OF THE RAIN FOREST EXTENT IN SOUTH AMERICA DURING PEISTOCENE RECENTLY HISTORY: thermal maximum in eocene, maximum extent of tropical environments Mittelbach et al. 2007 Average age of avian taxa in relation to latitude log (av. age of taxon) Stebbins: „cradle or museum?” latitude Weiner 2003 from Gaston & Blackburne 1996 Productivity • Higher primary production (Pp) enables to maintain more species populations (S) (Hutchinson 1959, „Santa Rozalia”) • S correlates (in large spatial scale) with Pp and AET • No correlation of Pp i S in small scale • No explanation of the mechanism Daniel Simberloff: „Santa Rozalia was a goat” Environmental energy (Turner) • Thermal conditions in the tropics are close to thermoneutrum and stable • Individual energy budget is less loaded enabling more expensive specialisations • Temperature and PET correlate with S Rapoport’s rule • • • • Species ranges close to equator are smaller Species ranges at low elevations are smaller „Mountains in the tropics are higher” (Janzen) Mechanism: seasonal climate suports broader adaptations, enabling greater geographical ranges • Stronger endemism in tropical climate • Critics: contradictory examples, no evidence for the mechanism postulated Sea molluscs Trees Fishes Reptiles and amphibians Rapoport’s rule Ranges of the taxons with the centres distant from equator are larger. Mammals from Stevens 1989; Weiner 2003 Trees in Costarica Rapoport’s rule on elevation gradient Mammals in Colorado Vertical ranges of species are larger if their centre is located at higher elevation a.s.l.; With increasing elevation the diversity decreases. Birds in Venezuela Stevens 1992; Weiner 2003 The rate of evolution • The rate of speciation is supposed to increase with temperature: – shorter generation time, – higher mutation rate, – stronger selection pressure (Rohde 1992) • Critics: The evidence not convincing Geometric limitation • Ranges randomly distributed over a large but limited area make up a gradient of local diversities because of purely „mechanical” reasons. Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis (Connel) • • • • Rain forest: non-equilibrium; „Gaps” continuously colonized (succesion) Coral reef: non-equilibrium Intermedite disturbances (hurricanes) and continuous succesion Classic text to read: Joseph H. Connel, 1978: Diversity in Tropical Rain Forests and Coral Reefs Science, V. 199, 4335: 1302-1310 FUNCTIONAL SIGNIFICANCE OF BIODIVERSITY IN THE TROPICS • • • • Global carbon balance Global water circulation Local trophic cascade Local biogeochemical balance Tree biodiveersity efect upon biomass carbon accumulation in equatorial forest (Panama) Bunker et al. 2005; SCIENCE 310:1029-1031 • Mid column: average and c.v. • Number of tree species: 1 ... 126 • Carbon accumulation: Mg/ha • Simulated sequence of spiecies loss: • random • large-statured first • low density ‘’ • high density ‘’ • slow-growing ‘’ • drought sensitive ‘’ • endemic ‘’ • widespread ‘’ Species richness The effuct of mammals and birds upon herbivores, soil fauna and phosphorus balance (Dunham, 2008) [exclusion experiment] • Study area: equatorial rain forest (Ivory Coast, W. Africa) • Mammals and birds excluded from study plots; • Studied were: • plant consumption • faunal composotion • decomposition rate • phosphorus balance Microfaunal sbundance drops, macrofaunal (earthworms) (Dunham, 2008) inceases on the plots void of mammale and birds Percent loss of leaf biomass and morality of seedlings in he plots without mammals and birds (Dunham, 2008) Changes in the amount of the available inorganic phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) in the soil depending on the presence of mammals and birds, after 8 month of exclusion. (Dunham, 2008) Trophic cascade in the rain forest positive effects negative efects (Dunham, 2008)