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Global diversity patterns and cross-taxa convergence in freshwater systems

Global diversity patterns and cross-taxa convergence in freshwater systems
Global diversity patterns and cross-taxa convergence in freshwater systems
Whereas global patterns and predictors of species diversity are well known for numerous terrestrial taxa, our understanding of freshwater diversity patterns and their predictors is much more limited. Here, we examine spatial concordance in global diversity patterns for five freshwater taxa (i.e. aquatic mammals, aquatic birds, fishes, crayfish and aquatic amphibians) and investigate the environmental factors driving these patterns at the river drainage basin grain. We find that species richness and endemism patterns are significantly correlated among taxa. We also show that cross-taxon congruence patterns are often induced by common responses of taxa to their contemporary and historical environments (i.e. convergent patterns). Apart from some taxa distinctiveness (i.e. fishes), the ‘climate/productivity’ hypothesis is found to explain the greatest variance in species richness and endemism patterns, followed by factors related to the ‘history/dispersion’ and ‘area/environmental heterogeneity’ hypotheses. As aquatic amphibians display the highest levels of congruency with other taxa, this taxon appears to be a good ‘surrogate’ candidate for developing global freshwater conservation planning at the river drainage basin grain.
amphibians, birds, congruence, crayfish, endemicity, fish, freshwater, global scale, mammals, species richness
0021-8790
365-376
Tisseuil, Clement
6f10f2b1-ea06-4698-a8bb-9d9295fa91c6
Cornu, Jean-François
dcde20fb-3381-4d3a-8835-3a4664ac2796
Beauchard, Olivier
62ea0e91-0002-4e03-9533-b7538c8f90da
Brosse, Sebastien
b81b5b42-32c8-4681-8bd0-e9e1625f489e
Darwall, William
6dd56a19-7744-49eb-a914-1f4c740e4a89
Holland, Robert
9c245e65-06bb-4b0e-8214-2b00ad2a47df
Hugueny, Bernard
100a3db6-e3a2-45f9-bf7e-aa6542c92277
Tedesco, Pablo A.
f7677c13-49ec-4d81-84e7-2d5155e98dae
Oberdorf, Thierry
df417b3a-ab48-4625-a18f-b2f89c860661
Tisseuil, Clement
6f10f2b1-ea06-4698-a8bb-9d9295fa91c6
Cornu, Jean-François
dcde20fb-3381-4d3a-8835-3a4664ac2796
Beauchard, Olivier
62ea0e91-0002-4e03-9533-b7538c8f90da
Brosse, Sebastien
b81b5b42-32c8-4681-8bd0-e9e1625f489e
Darwall, William
6dd56a19-7744-49eb-a914-1f4c740e4a89
Holland, Robert
9c245e65-06bb-4b0e-8214-2b00ad2a47df
Hugueny, Bernard
100a3db6-e3a2-45f9-bf7e-aa6542c92277
Tedesco, Pablo A.
f7677c13-49ec-4d81-84e7-2d5155e98dae
Oberdorf, Thierry
df417b3a-ab48-4625-a18f-b2f89c860661

Tisseuil, Clement, Cornu, Jean-François, Beauchard, Olivier, Brosse, Sebastien, Darwall, William, Holland, Robert, Hugueny, Bernard, Tedesco, Pablo A. and Oberdorf, Thierry (2013) Global diversity patterns and cross-taxa convergence in freshwater systems. Journal of Animal Ecology, 82 (2), 365-376. (doi:10.1111/1365-2656.12018).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Whereas global patterns and predictors of species diversity are well known for numerous terrestrial taxa, our understanding of freshwater diversity patterns and their predictors is much more limited. Here, we examine spatial concordance in global diversity patterns for five freshwater taxa (i.e. aquatic mammals, aquatic birds, fishes, crayfish and aquatic amphibians) and investigate the environmental factors driving these patterns at the river drainage basin grain. We find that species richness and endemism patterns are significantly correlated among taxa. We also show that cross-taxon congruence patterns are often induced by common responses of taxa to their contemporary and historical environments (i.e. convergent patterns). Apart from some taxa distinctiveness (i.e. fishes), the ‘climate/productivity’ hypothesis is found to explain the greatest variance in species richness and endemism patterns, followed by factors related to the ‘history/dispersion’ and ‘area/environmental heterogeneity’ hypotheses. As aquatic amphibians display the highest levels of congruency with other taxa, this taxon appears to be a good ‘surrogate’ candidate for developing global freshwater conservation planning at the river drainage basin grain.

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Published date: March 2013
Keywords: amphibians, birds, congruence, crayfish, endemicity, fish, freshwater, global scale, mammals, species richness
Organisations: Environmental

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 355577
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/355577
ISSN: 0021-8790
PURE UUID: a670d07d-5c4f-4bf6-8384-072fb21e4152
ORCID for Robert Holland: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3038-9227

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Date deposited: 02 Sep 2013 14:25
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:43

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Contributors

Author: Clement Tisseuil
Author: Jean-François Cornu
Author: Olivier Beauchard
Author: Sebastien Brosse
Author: William Darwall
Author: Robert Holland ORCID iD
Author: Bernard Hugueny
Author: Pablo A. Tedesco
Author: Thierry Oberdorf

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