Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: https://hdl.handle.net/10495/26769
Título : Taxonomic, phylogenetic, and trait Beta diversity in South American hummingbirds
Autor : Weinstein, Ben
Tinoco, Boris
Parra Vergara, Juan Luis
Brown, Leone
McGuire, Jimmy
Stiles, Gary
Graham, Catherine
metadata.dc.subject.*: Isolation
Aislamiento
Aves - clasificación
Birds - classification
Colombia
Ecuador
Filogenia
Phylogeny
Environment
Medio ambiente
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_37744
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_2593
Fecha de publicación : 2014
Editorial : University of Chicago Press
Citación : Weinstein, B. G., Tinoco, B., Parra, J. L., Brown, L. M., McGuire, J. A., Stiles, F. G., & Graham, C. H. (2014). Taxonomic, phylogenetic, and trait Beta diversity in South American hummingbirds. The American naturalist, 184(2), 211–224. https://doi.org/10.1086/676991
Resumen : ABSTRACT: Comparison of the taxonomic, phylogenetic, and traitdimensions of beta diversity may uncover the mechanisms that gen-erate and maintain biodiversity, such as geographic isolation, envi-ronmental filtering, and convergent adaptation. We developed anapproach to predict the relationship between environmental and geo-graphic distance and the dimensions of beta diversity. We tested thesepredictions using hummingbird assemblages in the northern Andes.We expected taxonomic beta diversity to result from recent geo-graphic barriers limiting dispersal, and we found that cost distance,which includes barriers, was a better predictor than Euclidean dis-tance. We expected phylogenetic beta diversity to result from his-torical connectivity and found that differences in elevation were thebest predictors of phylogenetic beta diversity. We expected high traitbeta diversity to result from local adaptation to differing environ-ments and found that differences in elevation were correlated withtrait beta diversity. When combining beta diversity dimensions, weobserve that high beta diversity in all dimensions results from adap-tion to different environments between isolated assemblages. Com-parisons with high taxonomic, low phylogenetic, and low trait betadiversity occurred among lowland assemblages separated by the An-des, suggesting that geographic barriers have recently isolated lineagesin similar environments. We provide insight into mechanisms gov-erning hummingbird biodiversity patterns and provide a frameworkthat is broadly applicable to other taxonomic groups.
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: 1537-5323
ISSN : 0003-0147
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1086/676991
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos de Revista en Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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