Increasing the phylogenetic coverage for understanding broad-scale diversity gradients

Oecologia. 2020 Mar;192(3):629-639. doi: 10.1007/s00442-020-04615-x. Epub 2020 Feb 12.

Abstract

Despite decades of scientific effort, there is still no consensus on the determinants of broad-scale gradients of animal diversity. We argue that general drivers of diversity are unlikely to be found among the narrowly defined taxa which are typically analyzed in studies of broad-scale diversity gradients because ecological niches evolve largely conservatively. This causes constraints in the use of available niche space leading to systematic differences in diversity gradients among taxa. We instead advocate studies of phylogenetically diverse animal communities along broad environmental gradients. Such multi-taxa communities are less constrained in resource use and diversification and may be better targets for testing major classical hypotheses on diversity gradients. Besides increasing the spatial scale in analyses, expanding the phylogenetic coverage may be a second way to achieve higher levels of generality in studies of broad-scale diversity gradients.

Keywords: DNA metabarcoding; Elevational diversity; Negative density dependence; Productivity hypothesis; Species energy theory; Temperature-speciation hypothesis.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biodiversity*
  • Ecosystem*
  • Phylogeny