Nestedness of Southern Ocean island biotas: Ecological perspectives on a biogeographical conundrum

Aim: To use patterns of nestedness in the indigenous and non-indigenous biotas of the Southern Ocean islands to determine the influence of dispersal ability on biogeographical patterns, and the importance of accounting for variation in dispersal ability in their subsequent interpretation, especially...

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Published in:Journal of Biogeography
Main Authors: Greve M., Gremmen N.J.M., Gaston K.J., Chown S.L.
Format: Review
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/12218
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2004.01169.x
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spelling ftunstellenbosch:oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/12218 2023-05-15T18:24:21+02:00 Nestedness of Southern Ocean island biotas: Ecological perspectives on a biogeographical conundrum Greve M. Gremmen N.J.M. Gaston K.J. Chown S.L. 2005 http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/12218 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2004.01169.x unknown biogeography dispersal nestedness oceanic regions Southern Ocean World Aves cellular organisms Hexapoda Tracheophyta Review 2005 ftunstellenbosch https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2004.01169.x 2018-10-27T11:27:25Z Aim: To use patterns of nestedness in the indigenous and non-indigenous biotas of the Southern Ocean islands to determine the influence of dispersal ability on biogeographical patterns, and the importance of accounting for variation in dispersal ability in their subsequent interpretation, especially in the context of the Insulantarctic and multi-regional hypotheses proposed to explain the biogeography of these islands. Location: Southern Ocean islands. Methods: Nestedness was determined using a new metric, d1 (a modification of discrepancy), for the indigenous and introduced seabirds, land birds, insects and vascular plants of 26 Southern Ocean islands. To assess the possible confounding effects of spatial autocorrelation on the results, islands were assigned to 11 major island groups and each group was treated as a single island in a following analysis. In addition, nestedness of the six Southern Ocean islands comprising the South Pacific Province (New Zealand islands) was analysed. All analyses were conducted for species and genera, for each of the taxa on its own, and for the complete data sets. Results: Statistically significant nestedness was found in all of the taxa examined, with nestedness declining in the order seabirds > land birds > vascular plants > insects for the indigenous species. Vagility had a marked influence on nestedness and the biogeographical patterns shown by the indigenous species. This influence was borne out by additional analyses of marine taxa and small-sized terrestrial species, both of which were more nested than the most nested group examined here, the seabirds. Assemblages of non-indigenous species also showed nestedness, and nestedness was generally more pronounced than in the indigenous species. Surprisingly, vagility had a significant effect on nestedness in these assemblages too. Main conclusions: Nestedness analyses provide a quantitative means of comparing biogeographical patterns for groups differing in vagility. These comparisons revealed that vagility has a considerable influence on biogeographical patterns and should be taken into account in analyses. Here, investigations of more vagile taxa support hypotheses for a single origin of the Southern Ocean island biota (the Insulantarctica scenario), whilst those of less mobile taxa support the more commonly held, multi-regional hypothesis. All biogeographical analyses across the Southern Ocean (and elsewhere) will be influenced by the effects of dispersal ability, with composite analyses dominated by sedentary groups likely to favour multi-regional scenarios, and those dominated by mobile groups favouring single origins. Mechanisms underlying nestedness in the region range from nested physiological tolerances in more mobile groups to colonization ability and patterns of speciation in less vagile taxa. Considerable nestedness in the non-indigenous assemblages is largely a consequence of the fact that many of these species are European weedy species. Review Review Southern Ocean Ocean Island Single Island Stellenbosch University: SUNScholar Research Repository Southern Ocean Pacific New Zealand Single Island ENVELOPE(68.667,68.667,-69.817,-69.817) Major Island ENVELOPE(-96.292,-96.292,55.728,55.728) Journal of Biogeography 32 1 155 168
institution Open Polar
collection Stellenbosch University: SUNScholar Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunstellenbosch
language unknown
topic biogeography
dispersal
nestedness
oceanic regions
Southern Ocean
World
Aves
cellular organisms
Hexapoda
Tracheophyta
spellingShingle biogeography
dispersal
nestedness
oceanic regions
Southern Ocean
World
Aves
cellular organisms
Hexapoda
Tracheophyta
Greve M.
Gremmen N.J.M.
Gaston K.J.
Chown S.L.
Nestedness of Southern Ocean island biotas: Ecological perspectives on a biogeographical conundrum
topic_facet biogeography
dispersal
nestedness
oceanic regions
Southern Ocean
World
Aves
cellular organisms
Hexapoda
Tracheophyta
description Aim: To use patterns of nestedness in the indigenous and non-indigenous biotas of the Southern Ocean islands to determine the influence of dispersal ability on biogeographical patterns, and the importance of accounting for variation in dispersal ability in their subsequent interpretation, especially in the context of the Insulantarctic and multi-regional hypotheses proposed to explain the biogeography of these islands. Location: Southern Ocean islands. Methods: Nestedness was determined using a new metric, d1 (a modification of discrepancy), for the indigenous and introduced seabirds, land birds, insects and vascular plants of 26 Southern Ocean islands. To assess the possible confounding effects of spatial autocorrelation on the results, islands were assigned to 11 major island groups and each group was treated as a single island in a following analysis. In addition, nestedness of the six Southern Ocean islands comprising the South Pacific Province (New Zealand islands) was analysed. All analyses were conducted for species and genera, for each of the taxa on its own, and for the complete data sets. Results: Statistically significant nestedness was found in all of the taxa examined, with nestedness declining in the order seabirds > land birds > vascular plants > insects for the indigenous species. Vagility had a marked influence on nestedness and the biogeographical patterns shown by the indigenous species. This influence was borne out by additional analyses of marine taxa and small-sized terrestrial species, both of which were more nested than the most nested group examined here, the seabirds. Assemblages of non-indigenous species also showed nestedness, and nestedness was generally more pronounced than in the indigenous species. Surprisingly, vagility had a significant effect on nestedness in these assemblages too. Main conclusions: Nestedness analyses provide a quantitative means of comparing biogeographical patterns for groups differing in vagility. These comparisons revealed that vagility has a considerable influence on biogeographical patterns and should be taken into account in analyses. Here, investigations of more vagile taxa support hypotheses for a single origin of the Southern Ocean island biota (the Insulantarctica scenario), whilst those of less mobile taxa support the more commonly held, multi-regional hypothesis. All biogeographical analyses across the Southern Ocean (and elsewhere) will be influenced by the effects of dispersal ability, with composite analyses dominated by sedentary groups likely to favour multi-regional scenarios, and those dominated by mobile groups favouring single origins. Mechanisms underlying nestedness in the region range from nested physiological tolerances in more mobile groups to colonization ability and patterns of speciation in less vagile taxa. Considerable nestedness in the non-indigenous assemblages is largely a consequence of the fact that many of these species are European weedy species. Review
format Review
author Greve M.
Gremmen N.J.M.
Gaston K.J.
Chown S.L.
author_facet Greve M.
Gremmen N.J.M.
Gaston K.J.
Chown S.L.
author_sort Greve M.
title Nestedness of Southern Ocean island biotas: Ecological perspectives on a biogeographical conundrum
title_short Nestedness of Southern Ocean island biotas: Ecological perspectives on a biogeographical conundrum
title_full Nestedness of Southern Ocean island biotas: Ecological perspectives on a biogeographical conundrum
title_fullStr Nestedness of Southern Ocean island biotas: Ecological perspectives on a biogeographical conundrum
title_full_unstemmed Nestedness of Southern Ocean island biotas: Ecological perspectives on a biogeographical conundrum
title_sort nestedness of southern ocean island biotas: ecological perspectives on a biogeographical conundrum
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/12218
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2004.01169.x
long_lat ENVELOPE(68.667,68.667,-69.817,-69.817)
ENVELOPE(-96.292,-96.292,55.728,55.728)
geographic Southern Ocean
Pacific
New Zealand
Single Island
Major Island
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
Pacific
New Zealand
Single Island
Major Island
genre Southern Ocean
Ocean Island
Single Island
genre_facet Southern Ocean
Ocean Island
Single Island
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2004.01169.x
container_title Journal of Biogeography
container_volume 32
container_issue 1
container_start_page 155
op_container_end_page 168
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