The contribution of geographically common and rare species to the spatial distribution of biodiversity

Author:

White Hannah J.12ORCID,McKeon Caroline M.23ORCID,Pakeman Robin J.4ORCID,Buckley Yvonne M.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences Anglia Ruskin University Cambridge UK

2. Zoology, School of Natural Sciences, Trinity College Dublin The University of Dublin Dublin Ireland

3. Environment and Marine Sciences Agri‐food and Biosciences Institute Belfast UK

4. The James Hutton Institute Aberdeen UK

Abstract

AbstractMotivation and aimMapping the spatial distribution of biodiversity is critical for understanding its fundamental drivers (e.g. speciation, environmental filtering) as well as for conservation assessment. An important dimension of this topic is how the distributions of subsets of species contribute to the overall distribution of biodiversity. Although studies have previously investigated the role of geographically common and rare species in determining these patterns, their respective contributions appear to vary between studies. Knowing which species contribute disproportionately to the spatial distribution of biodiversity enables the identification of key indicator species for biodiversity assessments across large areas and is important for prioritising areas for conservation actions. An extensive review of the literature was carried out to synthesise research on how geographic rarity contributes to spatial patterns of biodiversity. We identify potential explanations for the discrepancies in findings between studies and identify opportunities for further research.ResultsMany studies on the contribution of geographic commonness and rarity to the spatial distribution of biodiversity focus on species richness. A prevalent view is that common (widespread) species contribute disproportionately, although this is not ubiquitous across studies due to factors such as the geographic extent from which relative rarity is quantified. We identify research pathways that will further improve our knowledge of how geographically common and rare species shape the spatial distribution of biodiversity including the impact of spatial scale on species contributions and the incorporation of biodiversity components beyond taxonomic alpha diversity, that is functional and phylogenetic diversity.Main conclusionsFuture research should incorporate multiple biodiversity components and model scale dependency. This will further our knowledge on the underlying processes that shape the spatial variation of biodiversity across the planet and help inform biological surveys and conservation activities.

Funder

Irish Research Council

Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services Division

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Global and Planetary Change

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