INVESTIGADORES
GIRAUDO Alejandro Raul
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
AREAS OF ENDEMISM IN ARGENTINA: AN ANALYSIS USING 840 SPECIES OF PLANTS, MAMMALS, REPTILES, AMPHIBIANS, BIRDS AND INSECTS
Autor/es:
SZUMIK, CLAUDIA; AEGESEN, LONE; ARZAMENDIA, VANESA; BALDO, DIEGO; CASAGRANDA, DOLORES; CUEZZO, FABIANA; DÍAZ GÓMEZ, JUAN MANUEL;; DI GIACOMO, ADRIÁN; GIANNINI, NORBERTO; GIRAUDO, ALEJANDRO; GOLOBOFF, PABLO; GRAMAJO, CECILIA; KOPUCHIAN, CECILIA;; SONIA KRESTZSCHMAR; LIZARRALDE, MERCEDES; MOLINA, ALEJANDRA; MOLLERACH, MARCOS; MORRONE, OSVALDO; NAVARRO, FERNANDO; NOMDEDEU, SOLEDAD; PANIZZA, ADELA; SANDOVAL, MARÍA; SCROCCHI, GUSTAVO; TAHER, LEILA; ZULOAGA, FERNANDO
Lugar:
San Miguel de Tucumán, Tucumán, Argentina
Reunión:
Simposio; XXVII MEETING OF THE WILLI HENNIG SOCIETY and VIII REUNIÓN ARGENTINA DE CLADÍSTICA Y BIOGEOGRAFÍA.; 2008
Resumen:
The generalized notion of endemism implies distributional concordance of different groups of living taxa. Themain goal of this work is to analyze in a surface of 1.000.000 km2 (between parallels 21°S and 32°S) whether it ispossible to find areas of endemism supported by species of groups as diverse as the groups included in our data set.Then, the distribution of 820 species of plants (47 families), mammals (11 families), reptiles (6 families), amphibians (8 families), birds (19 families) and insects (21 families) is analyzed by using an optimality criterion to identify areas of endemism, implemented in the program NDM/VNDM (www.zmuc.dk/public/phylogeny/Endemism). This is thelargest study ever done in South America covering such an array of taxonomic diversity, and required the collaboration of numerous specialists. Unlike many other distributional studies, the present dataset contains only records provided by specialists in the respective groups. Almost all of these records are connected to a specimen in one of the major collections of Argentina, many of them collected by the authors. This implies that the ID and taxonomy are reliable (and subject to scrutiny), which is not the case for records downloaded from data bases in the www. Only those distributionpatterns supported by several taxa are discussed such as the Alto Andina area (supported by Camelids, Aves, Reptiles and Grasses) and the Yungas area (supported by 43-109 species from all the groups included).