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Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
Aim: How spatial, historical and ecological processes drive diversity patterns remains
one of the main foci of island biogeography. We determined how beta diversity varies
across spatial scales and among organisms, disentangled the drivers of this variation,
and examined how, consequently, biogeographic affinities within and among archipelagos vary among land plants.
Location: Macaronesia.
Taxon: Bryophytes, pteridophytes, spermatophytes.
Methods: Species turnover and nestedness were compared within and among archipelagos across taxonomic groups. The relationship between species turnover and
nestedness, climatic, geological and geographic factors was analysed using generalized dissimilarity models.
Results: Species turnover, but not nestedness, increased with the geographic scale.
This increment decreased from spermatophytes, pteridophytes and bryophytes,
wherein the median turnover was less than half that in spermatophytes. Bryophytes
exhibited a significantly higher nestedness and lower turnover than spermatophytes.
Extant climatic conditions and island age contributed the most to all models but the
importance of island age for bryophyte and pteridophyte turnover was marginal.
Spermatophyte floras clustered by archipelago, whereas the clustering patterns in
pteridophyte and bryophyte floras reflected macroclimatic conditions.
Main Conclusions: The lower increment of species turnover with spatial scale and the higher
nestedness in bryophytes and pteridophytes than in spermatophytes reflect the variation
in dispersal capacities and distribution ranges among land plants. Accordingly, extant climatic conditions contributed more to explain turnover in bryophytes and pteridophytes
than in spermatophytes, whereas factors associated with dispersal limitations, including
island age, geographic distance and archipelago structure, exhibited the reverse trend.
The differences in beta diversity patterns, caused by different responses of Macaronesian
land plant lineages to the main factors shaping their community composition, explain their
different biogeographic affinities. These differences reflect a distinct origin and different
mechanisms of speciation among Macaronesian land plant lineages and archipelagos.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
beta diversity bryophytes generalized dissimilarity model geographic scale Macaronesia nestedness oceanic islands pteridophytes species turnover spermatophytes
Contexto Educativo
Citação
Editora
Wiley
