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Using climate, energy, and spatial-based hypotheses to interpret macroecological patterns of North America chelonians.

Authors :
Ennen, Joshua R.
Agha, Mickey
Matamoros, Wilfredo A.
Hazzard, Sarah C.
Lovich, Jeffrey E.
Source :
Canadian Journal of Zoology. 2016, Vol. 94 Issue 7, p453-461. 9p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Our study investigates how factors, such as latitude, productivity, and several environmental variables, influence contemporary patterns of the species richness in North American turtles. In particular, we test several hypotheses explaining broad-scale species richness patterns on several species richness data sets: ( i) total turtles, ( ii) freshwater turtles only, ( iii) aquatic turtles, ( iv) terrestrial turtles only, ( v) Emydidae, and ( vi) Kinosternidae. In addition to spatial data, we used a combination of 25 abiotic variables in spatial regression models to predict species richness patterns. Our results provide support for multiple hypotheses related to broad-scale patterns of species richness, and in particular, hypotheses related to climate, productivity, water availability, topography, and latitude. In general, species richness patterns were positively associated with temperature, precipitation, diversity of streams, coefficient of variation of elevation, and net primary productivity. We also found that North America turtles follow the general latitudinal diversity gradient pattern (i.e., increasing species richness towards equator) by exhibiting a negative association with latitude. Because of the incongruent results among our six data sets, our study highlights the importance of considering phylogenetic constraints and guilds when interpreting species richness patterns, especially for taxonomic groups that occupy a myriad of habitats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00084301
Volume :
94
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Canadian Journal of Zoology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
116644837
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1139/cjz-2016-0033