Modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in China: Testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environment

The contemporary range size of endemic birds in China was investigated by studying the relative deterministic importance of phylogeny, space, and environment using a novel maximum likelihood model. The results show that space plays the most influential role in structuring the contemporary range size...

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Main Author: Youhua Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014-09-01
Series:Journal of Asia-Pacific Biodiversity
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2287884X14000284
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spelling doaj-5397a8ff43e14e67a68fe447dfb0d6b92021-04-02T10:11:36ZengElsevierJournal of Asia-Pacific Biodiversity2287-884X2014-09-017322923210.1016/j.japb.2014.05.002Modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in China: Testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environmentYouhua ChenThe contemporary range size of endemic birds in China was investigated by studying the relative deterministic importance of phylogeny, space, and environment using a novel maximum likelihood model. The results show that space plays the most influential role in structuring the contemporary range sizes of endemic birds by explaining 39.1% of the total variance alone, followed by phylogeny alone, which explains 12.3% of the variance. In contrast, environment alone plays no role in structuring the range sizes of endemic birds. However, the interaction between space and environment can explain 24.8% of the total variance. Therefore, although all three mechanisms can affect the ranges of the endemic birds of China, the role of environment only emerges when it interacts with space. This study shows that the range sizes of species are ubiquitously affected by space, irrespective of the taxonomic groups studied. In conclusion, the novel maximum likelihood model developed in this study allows the study of the sole and interactive effects of phylogeny, environment, and space on determining the evolution of trait patterns.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2287884X14000284Avian endemismBrownian evolutionRange heritageTrait evolution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Youhua Chen
spellingShingle Youhua Chen
Modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in China: Testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environment
Journal of Asia-Pacific Biodiversity
Avian endemism
Brownian evolution
Range heritage
Trait evolution
author_facet Youhua Chen
author_sort Youhua Chen
title Modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in China: Testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environment
title_short Modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in China: Testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environment
title_full Modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in China: Testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environment
title_fullStr Modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in China: Testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environment
title_full_unstemmed Modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in China: Testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environment
title_sort modeling contemporary range size patterns of endemic birds in china: testing the relative importance of phylogeny, space, and environment
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Asia-Pacific Biodiversity
issn 2287-884X
publishDate 2014-09-01
description The contemporary range size of endemic birds in China was investigated by studying the relative deterministic importance of phylogeny, space, and environment using a novel maximum likelihood model. The results show that space plays the most influential role in structuring the contemporary range sizes of endemic birds by explaining 39.1% of the total variance alone, followed by phylogeny alone, which explains 12.3% of the variance. In contrast, environment alone plays no role in structuring the range sizes of endemic birds. However, the interaction between space and environment can explain 24.8% of the total variance. Therefore, although all three mechanisms can affect the ranges of the endemic birds of China, the role of environment only emerges when it interacts with space. This study shows that the range sizes of species are ubiquitously affected by space, irrespective of the taxonomic groups studied. In conclusion, the novel maximum likelihood model developed in this study allows the study of the sole and interactive effects of phylogeny, environment, and space on determining the evolution of trait patterns.
topic Avian endemism
Brownian evolution
Range heritage
Trait evolution
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2287884X14000284
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