Re-evaluating the general dynamic theory of oceanic island biogeography

<p>The general dynamic model of oceanic island biogeography integrates temporal changes in ecological circumstances with diversification processes, and has stimulated current research in island biogeography. In the original publication, a set of testable hypotheses was analysed using regressio...

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Main Authors: Manuel Jonas Steinbauer, Klara Dolos, Richard Field, Björn Reineking, Carl Beierkuhnlein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Biogeography Society 2013-10-01
Series:Frontiers of Biogeography
Subjects:
Online Access:http://escholarship.org/uc/item/3fd5j89m
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spelling doaj-7efea0c3dde74201bee23c1c8e0a1c202020-11-24T22:52:11ZengInternational Biogeography SocietyFrontiers of Biogeography1948-65962013-10-0153Re-evaluating the general dynamic theory of oceanic island biogeographyManuel Jonas SteinbauerKlara DolosRichard FieldBjörn ReinekingCarl Beierkuhnlein<p>The general dynamic model of oceanic island biogeography integrates temporal changes in ecological circumstances with diversification processes, and has stimulated current research in island biogeography. In the original publication, a set of testable hypotheses was analysed using regression models: specifically, whether island data for four diversity indices are consistent with the ‘B~ATT<sup>2</sup>’ model, in which B is a diversity index, A is log(area) and T is time. The four indices were species richness, the number and percentage of single‐island endemic species, and a diversification index. Whether the relationships between these indices and time are unimodal (i.e., ‘hump‐shaped’) was a key focus, based on the characteristic ontogeny of a volcanic oceanic island. However, the significance testing unintentionally used zero, rather than the mean of the diversity index, as the null hypothesis, greatly inflating <em>F</em>‐ values and reducing <em>P</em>‐values compared with the standard regression approach. Here we first re‐analyze the data used to evaluate the general dynamic model in the seminal paper, using the standard null hypothesis, to provide an important qualification of its empirical results. This supports the significance of about half the original tests, the rest becoming non‐significant but mostly suggestive of the hypothesized relationship. Then we expand the original analysis by testing additional, theoretically derived functional relationships between the diversity indices, island area and time, within the framework of the ATT<sup>2</sup> model and using a mixed‐effects modelling approach. This shows that species richness peaks earlier in island life‐cycles than endemism. Area has a greater effect on species richness and the number of single‐island endemics than on the proportion of single‐island endemics and the diversification index, and was always better fit as a log–log relationship than as a semi‐log one. Finally, the richness–time relationship is positively skewed, the initial rise happening much more quickly than the later decline.</p>http://escholarship.org/uc/item/3fd5j89mDiversificationextinctionimmigrationisland evolutionisland life-cycleisland theoryLME modelsmacroecologyoceanic archipelagosspace-for-time substitution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manuel Jonas Steinbauer
Klara Dolos
Richard Field
Björn Reineking
Carl Beierkuhnlein
spellingShingle Manuel Jonas Steinbauer
Klara Dolos
Richard Field
Björn Reineking
Carl Beierkuhnlein
Re-evaluating the general dynamic theory of oceanic island biogeography
Frontiers of Biogeography
Diversification
extinction
immigration
island evolution
island life-cycle
island theory
LME models
macroecology
oceanic archipelagos
space-for-time substitution
author_facet Manuel Jonas Steinbauer
Klara Dolos
Richard Field
Björn Reineking
Carl Beierkuhnlein
author_sort Manuel Jonas Steinbauer
title Re-evaluating the general dynamic theory of oceanic island biogeography
title_short Re-evaluating the general dynamic theory of oceanic island biogeography
title_full Re-evaluating the general dynamic theory of oceanic island biogeography
title_fullStr Re-evaluating the general dynamic theory of oceanic island biogeography
title_full_unstemmed Re-evaluating the general dynamic theory of oceanic island biogeography
title_sort re-evaluating the general dynamic theory of oceanic island biogeography
publisher International Biogeography Society
series Frontiers of Biogeography
issn 1948-6596
publishDate 2013-10-01
description <p>The general dynamic model of oceanic island biogeography integrates temporal changes in ecological circumstances with diversification processes, and has stimulated current research in island biogeography. In the original publication, a set of testable hypotheses was analysed using regression models: specifically, whether island data for four diversity indices are consistent with the ‘B~ATT<sup>2</sup>’ model, in which B is a diversity index, A is log(area) and T is time. The four indices were species richness, the number and percentage of single‐island endemic species, and a diversification index. Whether the relationships between these indices and time are unimodal (i.e., ‘hump‐shaped’) was a key focus, based on the characteristic ontogeny of a volcanic oceanic island. However, the significance testing unintentionally used zero, rather than the mean of the diversity index, as the null hypothesis, greatly inflating <em>F</em>‐ values and reducing <em>P</em>‐values compared with the standard regression approach. Here we first re‐analyze the data used to evaluate the general dynamic model in the seminal paper, using the standard null hypothesis, to provide an important qualification of its empirical results. This supports the significance of about half the original tests, the rest becoming non‐significant but mostly suggestive of the hypothesized relationship. Then we expand the original analysis by testing additional, theoretically derived functional relationships between the diversity indices, island area and time, within the framework of the ATT<sup>2</sup> model and using a mixed‐effects modelling approach. This shows that species richness peaks earlier in island life‐cycles than endemism. Area has a greater effect on species richness and the number of single‐island endemics than on the proportion of single‐island endemics and the diversification index, and was always better fit as a log–log relationship than as a semi‐log one. Finally, the richness–time relationship is positively skewed, the initial rise happening much more quickly than the later decline.</p>
topic Diversification
extinction
immigration
island evolution
island life-cycle
island theory
LME models
macroecology
oceanic archipelagos
space-for-time substitution
url http://escholarship.org/uc/item/3fd5j89m
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