TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental correlates of leguminosae species richness in Mexico
T2 - Quantifying the contributions of energy and environmental seasonality
AU - Arenas-Navarro, Maribel
AU - Téllez-Valdés, Oswaldo
AU - López-Segoviano, Gabriel
AU - Murguía-Romero, Miguel
AU - Tello, J. Sebastián
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank to Enrique Martinez‐Meyer, Tania Escalante, Ana L. Silva, Cesar Miguel, and Ricardo Alvarez, for comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. We acknowledge two anonymous reviewers for providing constructive comments that help to improve the quality of this study. M.A.‐N. acknowledges the scholarship and financial support provided by the National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT) grant number 271063. Support was also provided by the Shirley A. Graham Fellowships in Systematic Botany and Biogeography by the Missouri Botanical Garden. JST was also supported by the National Science Foundation through grant DEB‐1836353. Finally, we thank Posgrado en Ciencias Biológicas, UNAM.
Funding Information:
We thank to Enrique Martinez-Meyer, Tania Escalante, Ana L. Silva, Cesar Miguel, and Ricardo Alvarez, for comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. We acknowledge two anonymous reviewers for providing constructive comments that help to improve the quality of this study. M.A.-N. acknowledges the scholarship and financial support provided by the National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT) grant number 271063. Support was also provided by the Shirley A. Graham Fellowships in Systematic Botany and Biogeography by the Missouri Botanical Garden. JST was also supported by the National Science Foundation through grant DEB-1836353. Finally, we thank Posgrado en Ciencias Biológicas, UNAM.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Explaining species richness patterns is a central issue in ecology, but a general explanation remains elusive. Environmental conditions have been proposed to be important drivers of these patterns, but we still need to better understand the relative contribution of environmental factors. Here, we aim at testing two environmental hypotheses for richness gradients: energy availability and environmental seasonality using diversity patterns of the family Leguminosae across Mexico. We compiled a data base of 502 species and 32,962 records. After dividing Mexico into 100 × 100 km grid cells, we constructed a map of variation in species richness that accounts for heterogeneity in sampling effort. We found the cells with the highest species richness of legumes are in the Neotropical region of Pacific coastal and southern Mexico, where the legume family dominates the tropical rain forests and seasonally dry tropical forests. Regression models show that energy and seasonality predictors can explain 25% and 49% of the variation in richness, respectively. Spatial autocorrelation analysis showed that richness has a strong spatial structure, but that most of this structure disappears when both energy and seasonality are used to account for richness gradient. Our study demonstrates multiple environmental conditions contribute complementarily to explain diversity gradients. Moreover, it shows that in some regions, environmental seasonality can be more important than energy availability, contradicting studies at coarser spatial scales. More basic taxonomic and floristic work is needed to help describe patterns of diversity for many groups to allow for testing the underlying mechanisms responsible for diversity gradients. Abstract in Spanish is available with online material.
AB - Explaining species richness patterns is a central issue in ecology, but a general explanation remains elusive. Environmental conditions have been proposed to be important drivers of these patterns, but we still need to better understand the relative contribution of environmental factors. Here, we aim at testing two environmental hypotheses for richness gradients: energy availability and environmental seasonality using diversity patterns of the family Leguminosae across Mexico. We compiled a data base of 502 species and 32,962 records. After dividing Mexico into 100 × 100 km grid cells, we constructed a map of variation in species richness that accounts for heterogeneity in sampling effort. We found the cells with the highest species richness of legumes are in the Neotropical region of Pacific coastal and southern Mexico, where the legume family dominates the tropical rain forests and seasonally dry tropical forests. Regression models show that energy and seasonality predictors can explain 25% and 49% of the variation in richness, respectively. Spatial autocorrelation analysis showed that richness has a strong spatial structure, but that most of this structure disappears when both energy and seasonality are used to account for richness gradient. Our study demonstrates multiple environmental conditions contribute complementarily to explain diversity gradients. Moreover, it shows that in some regions, environmental seasonality can be more important than energy availability, contradicting studies at coarser spatial scales. More basic taxonomic and floristic work is needed to help describe patterns of diversity for many groups to allow for testing the underlying mechanisms responsible for diversity gradients. Abstract in Spanish is available with online material.
KW - climate
KW - principal coordinates of neighborhood matrix
KW - rarefaction
KW - variation partitioning
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85078060281&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/btp.12735
DO - 10.1111/btp.12735
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85078060281
SN - 0006-3606
VL - 52
SP - 70
EP - 80
JO - Biotropica
JF - Biotropica
IS - 1
ER -