Biogeographic, climatic and spatial drivers differentially affect α -, β - and γ -diversities on oceanic archipelagos

Author:

Cabral Juliano Sarmento1,Weigelt Patrick1,Kissling W. Daniel2,Kreft Holger1

Affiliation:

1. Free Floater Group Biodiversity, Macroecology and Conservation Biogeography, Georg-August University of Göttingen, Büsgenweg 1, 37077, Göttingen, Germany

2. Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED), University of Amsterdam, PO Box 94248, 1090 Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

Island biogeographic studies traditionally treat single islands as units of analysis. This ignores the fact that most islands are spatially nested within archipelagos. Here, we took a fundamentally different approach and focused on entire archipelagos using species richness of vascular plants on 23 archipelagos worldwide and their 174 constituent islands. We assessed differential effects of biogeographic factors (area, isolation, age, elevation), current and past climate (temperature, precipitation, seasonality, climate change velocity) and intra-archipelagic spatial structure (archipelago area, number of islands, area range, connectivity, environmental volume, inter-island distance) on plant diversity. Species diversity of each archipelago ( γ ) was additively partitioned into α , β , nestedness and replacement β -components to investigate the relative importance of environmental and spatial drivers. Multiple regressions revealed strong effects of biogeography and climate on α and γ , whereas spatial factors, particularly number of islands, inter-island distance and area range, were key to explain β . Structural equation models additionally suggested that γ is predominantly determined by indirect abiotic effects via its components, particularly β . This highlights that β and the spatial arrangement of islands are essential to understand insular ecology and evolution. Our methodological framework can be applied more widely to other taxa and archipelago-like systems, allowing new insights into biodiversity origin and maintenance.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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