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A test of multiple hypotheses for the species richness gradient of South American owls
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">José?Alexandre?Felizola?Diniz-FilhoEmail author  Thiago?F?L?V?B?Rangel  Bradford?A?Hawkins
Institution:(1) Departamento de Biologia Geral, ICB, Universidade Federal de Goiàs, CP 131, 74.001-970 Goiânia, GO, Brasil;(2) Departamento de Biologia, MCAS/VPG, Universidade Católica de Goiás, Goiânia, GO, Brasil;(3) Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697, USA
Abstract:Many mechanisms have been proposed to explain broad scale spatial patterns in species richness. In this paper, we evaluate five explanations for geographic gradients in species richness, using South American owls as a model. We compared the explanatory power of contemporary climate, landcover diversity, spatial climatic heterogeneity, evolutionary history, and area. An important aspect of our analyses is that very different hypotheses, such as history and area, can be quantified at the same observation scale and, consequently can be incorporated into a single analytical framework. Both area effects and owl phylogenetic history were poorly associated with richness, whereas contemporary climate, climatic heterogeneity at the mesoscale and landcover diversity explained ca. 53% of the variation in species richness. We conclude that both climate and environmental heterogeneity should be retained as plausible explanations for the diversity gradient. Turnover rates and scaling effects, on the other hand, although perhaps useful for detecting faunal changes and beta diversity at local and regional scales, are not strong explanations for the owl diversity gradient.
Keywords:Species richness  Evolutionary history  Landcover diversity  South America  Strigiformes
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