IBIGEO   22622
INSTITUTO DE BIO Y GEOCIENCIAS DEL NOA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Detecting areas of endemism with a taxonomically diverse data set: plants,mammals, reptiles, amphibians, birds and insects from Argentina.
Autor/es:
SZUMIK, CLAUDIA; AAGESEN, LONE; CASAGRANDA, DOLORES; ARZAMENDIA, VANESA; BALDO, DIEGO; CLAPS, LUCÍA; CUEZZO, FABIANA; DÍAZ GÓMEZ, JUAN MANUEL; DI GIACOMO, ADRIÁN; GIRAUDO, ALEJANDRO; GOLOBOFF, PABLO; GRAMAJO, CECILIA; KOPUCHIAN, CECILIA; KRESTZSCHMAR, SONIA; LIZARRALDE, MERCEDES; MOLINA, ALEJANDRA; MOLLERACH, MARCOS; NAVARRO, FERNANDO; NOMDEDEU, SOLEDAD; PANIZZA, ADELA; PEREYRA, VERÓNICA; SANDOVAL, MARÍA; SCROCCHI, GUSTAVO.; ZULOAGA, FERNANDO
Revista:
CLADISTICS (PRINT)
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2011 vol. 1 p. 1 - 13
ISSN:
0748-3007
Resumen:
The idea of an area of endemism implies that different groups of plants and animals should have largely coincident distributions. This paper analyses an area of 1152 000 km2, between parallels 21 and 32S and meridians 70 and 53W to examine whether a large and taxonomically diverse data set actually displays areas supported by different groups. The data set includes the distribution of 805 species of plants (45 families), mammals (25 families), reptiles (six families), amphibians (five families), birds (18 families), and insects (30 families), and is analysed with the optimality criterion (based on the notion of endemism) implemented in the program NDM⁄VNDM. Almost 50% of the areas obtained are supported by three or more major groups; areas supported by fewer major groups generally contain species from different genera, families, or orders.2, between parallels 21 and 32S and meridians 70 and 53W to examine whether a large and taxonomically diverse data set actually displays areas supported by different groups. The data set includes the distribution of 805 species of plants (45 families), mammals (25 families), reptiles (six families), amphibians (five families), birds (18 families), and insects (30 families), and is analysed with the optimality criterion (based on the notion of endemism) implemented in the program NDM⁄VNDM. Almost 50% of the areas obtained are supported by three or more major groups; areas supported by fewer major groups generally contain species from different genera, families, or orders.⁄VNDM. Almost 50% of the areas obtained are supported by three or more major groups; areas supported by fewer major groups generally contain species from different genera, families, or orders.