Authors
Bradford A Hawkins, José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho, Carlos A Jaramillo, Stephen A Soeller
Publication date
2007/8
Journal
the american naturalist
Volume
170
Issue
S2
Pages
S16-S27
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Description
We tested the proposition that there are more species in the tropics because basal clades adapted to warm paleoclimates have been lost in regions now experiencing cool climates. Molecular phylogenies were used to classify species as “basal” and “derived” based on their family, and their richness patterns were contrasted. Path models also evaluated environmental predictors of richness patterns. As predicted, basal clades are more diverse in the lowland tropics, whereas derived clades are more diverse in the extratropics and high‐altitude tropics. Seventy‐four percent of the variation in bird richness was explained by environmental variables, but models differed for basal and derived groups. The overall gradient is described by the spatial pattern of basal clades, although there are differences in the Old and New Worlds. We conclude that in ecological time, the global richness gradient reflects birds’ responses to …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
BA Hawkins, JAF Diniz-Filho, CA Jaramillo, SA Soeller - the american naturalist, 2007