Global arthropod beta-diversity is spatially and temporally structured by latitude

Archive ouverte

Seymour, Mathew | Roslin, Tomas | Dewaard, Jeremy | Perez, Kate | D’souza, Michelle | Ratnasingham, Sujeevan | Ashfaq, Muhammad | Levesque-Beaudin, Valerie | Blagoev, Gergin | Bukowski, Belén | Cale, Peter | Crosbie, Denise | Decaëns, Thibaud | Dewaard, Stephanie | Ekrem, Torbjørn | El-Ansary, Hosam | Evouna Ondo, Fidèle | Fraser, David | Geiger, Matthias | Hajibabaei, Mehrdad | Hallwachs, Winnie | Hanisch, Priscila | Hausmann, Axel | Heath, Mark | Hogg, Ian | Janzen, Daniel | Kinnaird, Margaret | Kohn, Joshua | Larrivée, Maxim | Lees, David | León-Règagnon, Virginia | Liddell, Michael | Lijtmaer, Darío | Lipinskaya, Tatsiana | Locke, Sean | Manjunath, Ramya | Martins, Dino | Martins, Marlúcia | Mazumdar, Santosh | Mckeown, Jaclyn | Anderson-Teixeria, Kristina | Miller, Scott | Milton, Megan | Miskie, Renee | Morinière, Jérôme | Mutanen, Marko | Naik, Suresh | Nichols, Becky | Noguera, Felipe | Novotny, Vojtech | Penev, Lyubomir | Pentinsaari, Mikko | Quinn, Jenna | Ramsay, Leah | Rochefort, Regina | Schmidt, Stefan | Smith, M. Alex | Sobel, Crystal | Somervuo, Panu | Sones, Jayme | Staude, Hermann | St. Jaques, Brianne | Stur, Elisabeth | Telfer, Angela | Tubaro, Pablo | Wardlaw, Tim | Worcester, Robyn | Yang, Zhaofu | Young, Monica | Zemlak, Tyler | Zakharov, Evgeny | Zlotnick, Bradley | Ovaskainen, Otso | Hebert, Paul

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Global biodiversity gradients are generally expected to reflect greater species replacement closer to the equator. However, empirical validation of global biodiversity gradients largely relies on vertebrates, plants, and other less diverse taxa. Here we assess the temporal and spatial dynamics of global arthropod biodiversity dynamics using a beta-diversity framework. Sampling includes 129 sampling sites whereby malaise traps are deployed to monitor temporal changes in arthropod communities. Overall, we encountered more than 150,000 unique barcode index numbers (BINs) (i.e. species proxies). We assess between site differences in community diversity using beta-diversity and the partitioned components of species replacement and richness difference. Global total beta-diversity (dissimilarity) increases with decreasing latitude, greater spatial distance and greater temporal distance. Species replacement and richness difference patterns vary across biogeographic regions. Our findings support long-standing, general expectations of global biodiversity patterns. However, we also show that the underlying processes driving patterns may be regionally linked.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Species-Level Para- and Polyphyly in DNA Barcode Gene Trees: Strong Operational Bias in European Lepidoptera

Archive ouverte | Mutanen, Marko | CCSD

International audience. The proliferation of DNA data is revolutionizing all fields of systematic research. DNA barcode sequences, now available for millions of specimens and several hundred thousand species, are in...

Genetic patterns in European geometrid moths revealed by the Barcode Index Number (BIN) system

Archive ouverte | Hausmann, Axel | CCSD

International audience. Background: The geometrid moths of Europe are one of the best investigated insect groups in traditional taxonomy making them an ideal model group to test the accuracy of the Barcode Index Num...

Protecting stable biological nomenclatural systems enables universal communication: A collective international appeal

Archive ouverte | Jiménez-Mejías, Pedro | CCSD

Supplementary material S1 lists the 1543 additional coauthors: https://oup.silverchair-cdn.com/oup/backfile/Content_public/Journal/bioscience/74/7/10.1093_biosci_biae043/1/biae043_supplemental_file.zip. Co-authors who contributed ...

Chargement des enrichissements...