A global model of island species-area relationships

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2019 Jun 18;116(25):12337-12342. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1818190116. Epub 2019 May 30.

Abstract

The increase in species richness with island area (ISAR) is a well-established global pattern, commonly described by the power model, the parameters of which are hypothesized to vary with system isolation and to be indicative of ecological process regimes. We tested a structural equation model of ISAR parameter variation as a function of taxon, isolation, and archipelago configuration, using a globally distributed dataset of 151 ISARs encompassing a range of taxa and archipelago types. The resulting models revealed a negative relationship between ISAR intercept and slope as a function of archipelago species richness, in turn shaped by taxon differences and by the amount and disposition of archipelago area. These results suggest that local-scale (intra-archipelago) processes have a substantial role in determining ISAR form, obscuring the diversity patterns predicted by island theory as a function of archipelago isolation. These findings have implications for the use and interpretation of ISARs as a tool within biogeography, ecology, and conservation.

Keywords: archipelago effects; diversity model; island biogeography; macroecology; species–area relationship.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biodiversity*
  • Geography
  • Islands*
  • Models, Theoretical