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Island biogeography

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Island biogeography. What controls the number of plant and animal species on this island?. Does size matter? Isolation? Habitat variation? Environmental history?. Island in the Bay of Fundy. Species - area relationships. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Island biogeography Island in the Bay of Fundy What controls the number of plant and animal species on this island? Does size matter? Isolation? Habitat variation? Environmental history?
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Page 1: Island biogeography

Island biogeography

Island in the Bay of Fundy

What controls the number of plant and animal species on this island?

Does size matter?Isolation?Habitat variation?Environmental history?

Page 2: Island biogeography

Species - area relationships

Johann Reinhold Forster (1729-98) served as a botanist with Captain Cook. After exploring the islands of the southern Pacific he observed:

“Islands only produce a greater or less number of species as their circumference is more or less extensive”.

Small islands harbour fewer species.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

The Forsters’ (father & son)

collecting specimens in Tahiti

Page 3: Island biogeography

Species-area relationshipsArrhenius (1921) “Species and Area”

Gleason (1922) “On the relation between species and area”. Ecology, 3.

Gleason censused the plants in 240 1m2 plots in an aspen wood in northern Michigan. He found 27 species in total, with an average of 4 species per quadrat.

Page 4: Island biogeography

Species-area relationshipsPreston (1962) “The canonical distribution of commonewss and rarity”. Ecology, 43.

Preston introduced the ‘Arrhenius equation’:

S = cAz

where S is number of species, A is plot area, and c and z are constants.

Page 5: Island biogeography

c

Applying the Arrhenius equation to Gleason’s

data:

z = slope

c = intercept

Page 6: Island biogeography

Variations in value of ce.g. insects

e.g. mammals

plants

Page 7: Island biogeography

Variations in the value of z

realworldcases(0.26-0.33)

Page 8: Island biogeography

What controls the species-area curve?

Page 9: Island biogeography

What do these have in common?

1

23

4

Page 10: Island biogeography

West Indian avifaunas

10010 0001 000 0001 000100 000Area (km )21020406010020080Jamaica

Page 11: Island biogeography

Avifaunal evidence from oceanic islands

100

1000

Page 12: Island biogeography

MacArthur and Wilson’s“Theory of Equilibrium Island

Biogeography” (1967)

= equilibrium species number

Page 13: Island biogeography

The effects of island size

Page 14: Island biogeography

Species-area curve, Galapagos Islands

Page 15: Island biogeography

Galapagos plant diversity and microclimate:

area is a proxy for habitat variability

<300 m >500 m

Page 16: Island biogeography

Plant diversity in the south Pacific: is the variability

controlled by habitat variation?

Page 17: Island biogeography

The effects of island distance

Page 18: Island biogeography

Probability of success with target distance

(metaphor)

Page 19: Island biogeography

Dispersal probability with island distance

Page 20: Island biogeography

Avifaunal diversity

in the south

Pacific: the

effects of distance

from PNG

Page 21: Island biogeography

Real-world variations

Page 22: Island biogeography

Testing the MacArthur and Wilson theory

A. Natural experiments - Krakatau/Rakata

Page 23: Island biogeography

Bird and mammal

diversity on the remnant

islands of Krakatau vs.

the biodiversity of

neighbouring islands

remnantsneighbours

Rakata

Rakata

Page 24: Island biogeography

Rakata bird colonizationMcArthur & Wilson’s equilibrium predictions from nearby islands:

30 bird species 40 yrs to equilibrium;turnover: 1 species/yr.

?

Survey dates

Page 25: Island biogeography

Rakata:plant

colonization

Page 26: Island biogeography

Rakata: plant immigration and extinction

Page 27: Island biogeography

Testing the theory:artificial

experimentsI:

defaunation and

colonization Small mangrove islands in the Florida keys

Page 28: Island biogeography

Testing the theory:artificial experiments

II: colonization of artificial substratesFouling panels

Page 29: Island biogeography

Variations in

turnover rate at

equilibrium

Page 30: Island biogeography

Extending the theory“Insularity is moreover a universal feature of biogeography. Many of the principles graphically displayed in the Galapagos Islands and other remote archipelagos apply in lesser or greater degree to all natural habitats”

e.g. mountain-top alpine areas; islands of trees at the arctic treeline, urban parks, lakes, bogs, desert oases, clearcuts, islands of fragmented habitat, and even individual rocks, plants, etc.

Page 31: Island biogeography

Lake and bog islands

Page 32: Island biogeography

Mountain islands• Distribution of alpine

tundra ecosystems in BC; an archipelago formed by hundreds of ± discrete islands separated by forest and prairie in the neighbouring valleys.

Page 33: Island biogeography

Mountain islands

Page 34: Island biogeography

Vacant urban lots

10

100

100 1000 10000Area (sq. m)

Plant species

Crowe, L. M. 1979. Lots of weeds: insular phytogeography of vacant urban lots. J. Biogeography 6: 169-181.

Vacant urban lot,Philadelphia

Page 35: Island biogeography

Fragmented habitat islands

“the breakup of a large landmass into smaller units would necessarily lead to the extinction or local extermination of one or more species and the differential preservation of others”Alphonse de Candolle, 1855

True for all habitats; e.g. Wisconsin

woodlands 1902 1950

1830 1882

Page 36: Island biogeography

Urban parks:breeding birds, Madrid (Spain)

1

10

100

1 10 100 1000 10000Area (ha)

No. of species


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