INVESTIGADORES
RUGGIERO adriana
artículos
Título:
The geographic ranges of mammalian species in South America: spatial patterns in environmental resistance and anisotropy
Autor/es:
RUGGIERO, ADRIANA; LAWTON, JOHN H.; BLACKBURN, TIM M.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY
Editorial:
Blackwell Publishing
Referencias:
Lugar: Oxford; Año: 1998 vol. 25 p. 1093 - 1103
ISSN:
0305-0270
Resumen:
We analyse the geographical distribution of South American mammalian species using two biogeographic indices: environmental resistance (R50) and anisotropy (A50). R50 quantifies the loss of biotic resemblance occurring from any point in the map to the rest of the continent. A50 quantifies the extent to which the perimeter: area ratio of the geographical ranges of all species whose distributions overlap at any particular location depart from the perimeter: area ration of a circle. We test for the latitudinal Rapoport effect that predicts an increase in the range-sizes of mammalian species, and hence a decrease in the values of R50 towards the south. We test for the effect of mountains on species'ranges, given that Janzen's argument that "mountain passes are higher in the tropics" implicitly predicts greater anisotropy in the tropics. Continental spatial patterns of variation in R50 and A50 suggest a biogeographic division of South America consistent with most classical zoogeographical classifications proposed for the continent. Rapid change in mammalian range-sizes and shapes occurs at the limit between the Guayano-Brazilian and Andean-Patagonean subregions. R50 data do not support the latitudinal Rapoport effect: the most widespread species locate in the eastern portions of Brazil, the most restricted ones are in association with the Andes. A50 data support Janzen's prediction: the effect of mountains on species'distributions is greater in equatorial and central regions of the Andes rather than in the south. R50- and A50- contour maps reveal that, mainly due to the effects of the lie of the land and likely differences in the history of the fauna, the continent has a biogeographic texture which must have major constraints on local ecological patterns and processes. This stresses the importance of considering the role of biogeographic structure in the analyses of geographical gradients in species'distributions.