Authors
Suzette GA Flantua, Davnah Payne, Michael K Borregaard, Carl Beierkuhnlein, Manuel J Steinbauer, Stefan Dullinger, Franz Essl, Severin DH Irl, David Kienle, Holger Kreft, Bernd Lenzner, Sietze J Norder, Kenneth F Rijsdijk, Sabine B Rumpf, Patrick Weigelt, Richard Field
Publication date
2020/10
Journal
Global Ecology and Biogeography
Volume
29
Issue
10
Pages
1651-1673
Description
Aim
Mountains and islands are both well known for their high endemism. To explain this similarity, parallels have been drawn between the insularity of “true islands” (land surrounded by water) and the isolation of habitats within mountains (so‐called “mountain islands”). However, parallels rarely go much beyond the observation that mountaintops are isolated from one another, as are true islands. Here, we challenge the analogy between mountains and true islands by re‐evaluating the literature, focusing on isolation (the prime mechanism underlying species endemism by restricting gene flow) from a dynamic perspective over space and time.
Framework
We base our conceptualization of “isolation” on the arguments that no biological system is completely isolated; instead, isolation has multiple spatial and temporal dimensions relating to biological and environmental processes. We distinguish four key …
Total citations
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