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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

Dietary specialization mirrors Rapoport’s rule in European geometrid moths

TL;DR: In this article , the authors analyzed 631 species of geometrids (85.2% of taxa within the biogeographical region) and found strong support for the latitude-niche breadth hypothesis and for Rapoport's rule.
Journal ArticleDOI

Red-listed plants are contracting their elevational range faster than common plants in the European Alps.

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used a dataset of more than 1 million records of common and red-listed native and alien plants to reconstruct range dynamics of 1,479 species of the European Alps over the last 30 years.
Dissertation

Effects of nutrient addition on plant community composition: a functional trait analysis in a long-term experiment

Emily M Tate
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of nutrient availability on plant community composition and diversity have been well-documented, but the mechanisms behind the community response remain unclear, and the authors examined eight functional traits of plant species, building upon the previously collected community data from the past 14 years.
Posted ContentDOI

Range size dynamics can explain why evolutionarily age and diversification rate correlate with contemporary extinction risk in plants

TL;DR: It is found that a greater proportion of species were threatened by extinction in younger and faster-diversifying genera, suggesting that range size dynamics may explain differing patterns of extinction risk across the ToL with consequences for biodiversity conservation.

The Spatial Ecology of a Dispersal Limited Mammal on a Mosaic Landscape

TL;DR: Using nanofiltration membranes for the recovery of phosphorous with a second type of technology for the Recovery of nitrogen is suggest to be a viable process.
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