Authors
Wolfgang J Junk, Mark Brown, Ian C Campbell, Max Finlayson, Brij Gopal, Lars Ramberg, Barry G Warner
Publication date
2006/10
Journal
Aquatic Sciences
Volume
68
Pages
400-414
Publisher
Birkhäuser-Verlag
Description
The species diversity data of seven globally important wetlands (Canadian peatlands, Florida Everglades, Pantanal, Okavango Delta, Sundarban, Tonle Sap, and Kakadu National Park) were compared. The available data for most groups of lower plants and animals are insufficient for a comparative analysis. Data on vertebrates and higher plants are more complete and show high species diversity. The large habitat diversity allows the coexistence of amphibious species with many immigrants from connected deepwater and terrestrial habitats. Several of these immigrant species find an important permanent refuge in the wetlands; some use the wetlands as periodic habitats. All wetlands are important habitats for long-distance migratory bird species. The species composition reflects the biogeography of the respective regions, e.g. the high diversity of large ungulates characteristic for Africa is also found in the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
WJ Junk, M Brown, IC Campbell, M Finlayson, B Gopal… - Aquatic Sciences, 2006