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Journal ArticleDOI

Niche breadth predicts geographical range size: a general ecological pattern.

Rachel A. Slatyer, +2 more
- 01 Aug 2013 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 8, pp 1104-1114
TLDR
Despite significant variability in the strength of the relationship among studies, the general positive relationship suggests that specialist species might be disproportionately vulnerable to habitat loss and climate change due to synergistic effects of a narrow niche and small range size.
Abstract
The range of resources that a species uses (i.e. its niche breadth) might determine the geographical area it can occupy, but consensus on whether a niche breadth–range size relationship generally exists among species has been slow to emerge. The validity of this hypothesis is a key question in ecology in that it proposes a mechanism for commonness and rarity, and if true, may help predict species' vulnerability to extinction. We identified 64 studies that measured niche breadth and range size, and we used a meta-analytic approach to test for the presence of a niche breadth–range size relationship. We found a significant positive relationship between range size and environmental tolerance breadth (z = 0.49), habitat breadth (z = 0.45), and diet breadth (z = 0.28). The overall positive effect persisted even when incorporating sampling effects. Despite significant variability in the strength of the relationship among studies, the general positive relationship suggests that specialist species might be disproportionately vulnerable to habitat loss and climate change due to synergistic effects of a narrow niche and small range size. An understanding of the ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that drive and cause deviations from this niche breadth–range size pattern is an important future research goal.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Linking speciation to extinction: Diversification raises contemporary extinction risk in amphibians

TL;DR: Examination of evolutionary patterns of modern extinction risk across over 300 genera within one of the most threatened vertebrate classes, the Amphibia, finds that rapidly diversifying amphibian clades also had a greater share of threatened species and may reflect a greater propensity to speciate through peripheral isolation.
Book ChapterDOI

Dispersal in Dytiscidae

TL;DR: This chapter examines the mechanisms, causes, and consequences of dispersal in predaceous diving beetles, reviewing work on flight and flightlessness, ultimate and proximate triggers of disperseal, and the biogeographical/macroecological consequences of movement, as well as suggesting areas where further research is required.
Journal ArticleDOI

Species traits explaining sensitivity of snakes to human land use estimated from citizen science data

TL;DR: It is shown that snake species that feed primarily on vertebrates are more sensitive to human land use – a primary driver of extinction, and practitioners should prioritize preserving aquatic habitat and natural landscapes with intact biotic communities that can support species at higher trophic levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple dimensions of dietary diversity in large mammalian herbivores.

TL;DR: The relationship between taxonomic dietary diversity and phylogenetic dietary diversity (PDD) in a species-rich community of large mammalian herbivores in semi-arid East African savanna is characterized, suggesting contrasting implications for efforts to predict how species will respond to climate change and other environmental perturbations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between biogeography and ecology: envelopes, models, predictions

TL;DR: Results provide valuable evidence that Darwin was correct, and many ecologists now recognise that there is a problem with the niche theory of distribution, and current ecological processes explain distribution at smaller scales than do biogeographical and evolutionary processes, but the latter can lead to patterns that are much more local than many ecologist have assumed.
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