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Island Biogeography Dr. Mattingly April 13, 2015

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Page 1: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Island Biogeography

Dr. MattinglyApril 13, 2015

Page 2: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Biogeography

Page 3: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

BiogeographyThe study of the distribution of organisms in space and time

Biogeographers evaluate diversity patterns across geographic gradients

• Area• Isolation• Latitude• Depth• Elevation

Page 4: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Biogeography

Diversity patterns are shaped by four fundamental processes:

1. Dispersal

2. Colonization

3. Extinction

4. Evolution

Page 5: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Biogeography

1. Dispersal

2. Colonization

3. Extinction

4. Evolution

The movement of organisms from a point of origin to a new location

Diversity patterns are shaped by four fundamental processes:

Page 6: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Biogeography

1. Dispersal

2. Colonization

3. Extinction

4. Evolution

The movement of organisms from a point of origin to a new location

Diversity patterns are shaped by four fundamental processes:

The establishment of organisms at a new location (persistent population)

Page 7: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Biogeography

1. Dispersal

2. Colonization

3. Extinction

4. Evolution

The movement of organisms from a point of origin to a new location

Diversity patterns are shaped by four fundamental processes:

The establishment of organisms at a new location (persistent population)

The elimination of a species from a particular area (extirpation)

Page 8: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Biogeography

1. Dispersal

2. Colonization

3. Extinction

4. Evolution

The movement of organisms from a point of origin to a new location

Diversity patterns are shaped by four fundamental processes:

The establishment of organisms at a new location (persistent population)

The elimination of a species from a particular area (extirpation)

The change in allelic frequencies in a population over time (may lead to speciation)

Page 9: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Biogeography

1. Dispersal

2. Colonization

3. Extinction

4. Evolution

The movement of organisms from a point of origin to a new location

Diversity patterns are shaped by four fundamental processes:

The establishment of organisms at a new location (persistent population)

The elimination of a species from a particular area (extirpation)

The change in allelic frequencies in a population over time (may lead to speciation)

Page 10: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Biodiversity

Page 11: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

BiodiversityThe variety of living organisms at all levels of biological organization

Genetic diversity:Variation in genetic makeup andmorphological traits among individuals in a population

from genes to ecosystems

Species diversity:Variation in the number and relative abundance of species in a community

Ecosystem diversity:Variation in biotic and abiotic properties amongecosystems in a landscape

Page 12: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Islands provide model systems for studies of biogeography

Charles Darwin Alfred Russel Wallace

Early naturalists cataloged the diversity of island organisms

These patterns led to an understanding of the processes that shape island biodiversity

Page 13: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Islands provide model systems for studies of biogeography

What is an island?

Why do islands provide model systems?

Page 14: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Islands provide model systems for studies of biogeography

What is an island?

Why do islands provide model systems?

Islands represent discrete patches of habitat that vary in isolation and area

Page 15: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

• Species-Area Relationship

• Species-Distance Relationship

Islands provide model systems for studies of biogeography

Islands represent discrete patches of habitat that vary in isolation and area

Species richness decreases with increased island isolation

Species richness increases with increased island area

These notions are central to the Theory of Island Biogeography

Page 16: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Dispersal to Oceanic Islands

The movement of organisms from a point of origin to a new location

Propagule: the ‘colonizing unit’ (capable of reproducing in the new location)

Page 17: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Dispersal to Oceanic Islands

The movement of organisms from a point of origin to a new location

Propagule: the ‘colonizing unit’ (capable of reproducing in the new location)

Mechanisms of Dispersal

• Wind dispersal

• Sea Dispersal

• Animal dispersal

Page 18: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Mechanisms of Dispersal

• Wind Dispersal / Aerial Transport

Passivevs.

Active

Page 19: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Mechanisms of Dispersal

• Sea Dispersal (e.g. drifting, rafting, swimming)

Passivevs.

Active

Page 20: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Mechanisms of Dispersal

Abiotic rafts

Volcanic pumice (buoyant)

• Can serve as a raft for algae and invertebrates

Page 21: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Mechanisms of Dispersal

Abiotic rafts

Volcanic pumice (buoyant)

• Can serve as a raft for algae and invertebrates

Vegetation

• Can serve as a raft for vertebrates (and other taxa)

Biotic rafts

Page 22: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Mechanisms of Dispersal

Page 23: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Mechanisms of Dispersal

• Animal Dispersal (e.g. hitchhiking)

endozoochoryvs.

ectozoochory

naturalvs.

human-mediated

Page 24: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Mechanisms of Dispersal

Carlquist, S. 1981. Chance dispersal. Scientific American 69:509-516.

Plant dispersal to the Galapagos Islands

Galapagos flora came from S. America via an estimated 378 colonization events

60% animal dispersed (birds)

31% wind dispersed

9% sea dispersed (drifting)

Page 25: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Mechanisms of Dispersal

Krakatau

Krakatau, 1883 eruption

The relative importance of differentdispersal mechanisms may changeover time

Page 26: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Long-distance dispersal events are rare and largely random

Dispersal to Oceanic Islands

Sweepstakes route

Jump Dispersal: the colonization of areas over long distances

Green iguana

(e.g. Hawaii, Galapagos)

Page 27: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Dispersal to Oceanic Islands

• Colonizers share adaptations that facilitate successful dispersal to islands

(but these adaptations may not ensure survival upon reaching an island)

• Colonization of an island often requires different traits than the ones

that permitted dispersal to the island

Long-distance dispersal events are rare and largely random

Sweepstakes route

Jump Dispersal: the colonization of areas over long distances(e.g. Hawaii, Galapagos)

Page 28: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Natural Selection

Page 29: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Natural Selection

Cody & Overton (1996)

pappus

achene

Page 30: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Dispersal to Oceanic Islands

Long-distance dispersal events are rare and largely random

Sweepstakes route

Jump Dispersal: the colonization of areas over long distances

Island hopping: organisms may disperse over long distances by moving from one island to another

Source Pop.

(e.g. Hawaii, Galapagos)

Page 31: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Species traits that are suited for long-distance dispersal

Page 32: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Species traits that are suited for long-distance dispersal

• Small propagule size (for passive transport)

• Large body size (for active transport)

• Tolerance of desiccation

• Tolerance of temperature extremes

• Tolerance of intense sunlight exposure

• Sufficient energy reserves (or a low metabolic rate)

• Colonizers share adaptations that facilitate successful dispersal to islands

(but these adaptations may not ensure survival upon reaching an island)

Page 33: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Following dispersal, an organism must overcome obstacles to establishment

• Must persist in an environment with a tolerable range of abiotic conditions(e.g. temperature, salinity, moisture)

• Must be able to access resources necessary for its maintenance, growth,and reproduction

• Must be able to find a mate and reproduce

• Must be able to avoid pre-reproductive mortality

Page 34: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Island populations are more prone to extinction than those on the mainland

• Island populations are typically smaller

• Island populations typically have less genetic diversity

• Upon arrival, organisms generally are not adapted to the island habitat

Page 35: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Biogeography

1. Dispersal

2. Colonization

3. Extinction

4. Evolution

The movement of organisms from a point of origin to a new location

Diversity patterns are shaped by four fundamental processes:

The establishment of organisms at a new location (persistent population)

The elimination of a species from a particular area (extirpation)

The change in allelic frequencies in a population over time (may lead to speciation)

Page 36: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

• Species-Area Relationship

• Species-Distance Relationship

Islands provide model systems for studies of biogeography

Islands represent discrete patches of habitat that vary in isolation and area

Species richness decreases with increased island isolation

Species richness increases with increased island area

These notions are central to the Theory of Island Biogeography

Page 37: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Species-Distance Relationships

Bird species richness decreases with increased isolation

Page 38: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Species-Distance Relationships

Mammal species richness decreases with increased isolation

Page 39: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Mount St. Helens, 1980 eruption

Species-Distance Relationships

Plant species richness decreases with increased isolation

Page 40: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Species-Distance Relationships

Birds in montane forest islands

Bird species richness decreases with increased isolation

Page 41: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Why might species richness decrease with increased island isolation?

Page 42: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Why might species richness decrease with increased island isolation?

• Dispersal limitation

The ratio of observed : expected species richnessdeclines with increased island isolation

Page 43: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Species-Area Relationships

Page 44: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Species-Area Relationships

Page 45: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Species-Area Relationships

Page 46: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Species-Area Relationships

Page 47: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Why might species richness increase with increased island area?

Page 48: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Why might species richness increase with increased island area?

• More available resources on large islands

• Large islands support larger populations

• Large populations are less prone to extinction

• Increased habitat diversity on large islands

• Large islands provide large ‘targets’ for dispersing propagules

Page 49: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

The Theory of Island Biogeography

Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats of comparable size

• Non-equilibrium theory of island biogeography:

Islands contain fewer species because there has not been sufficient time

for species to accumulate via immigration

Page 50: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

The Theory of Island Biogeography

Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats of comparable size

• Non-equilibrium theory of island biogeography:

Islands contain fewer species because there has not been sufficient time

for species to accumulate via immigration

• Equilibrium theory of island biogeography:

MacArthur & Wilson (1967)

Explains patterns of species richness on islands

Species richness is determined by a balance between

two processes: immigration and extinction

Page 51: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

The number of species on an island is determined by:

1) The rate of immigration of new species

2) The rate of local extinction

Assumption: An island can hold a fixednumber of individuals, based on its size

Number of species on islandEquilibrium numberRa

te o

f im

mig

ratio

n or

ext

inct

ion

Page 52: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

The number of species on an island is determined by:

1) The rate of immigration of new species

2) The rate of local extinction

Assumption: An island can hold a fixednumber of individuals, based on its size

Number of species on islandEquilibrium numberRa

te o

f im

mig

ratio

n or

ext

inct

ion Immigration:

As the number of specieson an island increases, immigration rates declinebecause available nichesbecome more limited

Page 53: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

The number of species on an island is determined by:

1) The rate of immigration of new species

2) The rate of local extinction

Assumption: An island can hold a fixednumber of individuals, based on its size

Number of species on islandEquilibrium numberRa

te o

f im

mig

ratio

n or

ext

inct

ion Immigration:

As the number of specieson an island increases, immigration rates declinebecause available nichesbecome more limited

Extinction: As the number of specieson an island increases, extinction rates increasebecause species competemore intensely for limitedresources

Page 54: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

The number of species on an island is determined by:

1) The rate of immigration of new species

2) The rate of local extinction

Number of species on islandEquilibrium numberRa

te o

f im

mig

ratio

n or

ext

inct

ion Equilibrium:

When the number ofspecies on an islandstabilizes.

This is achieved whenimmigration rates equalextinction rates.

Equilibrium number willvary with island size andisland isolation.

I > E E > I

Page 55: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Island size and Island isolation influence the number of species on an island

Immigration and Extinction rates vary with both island size and island isolation

Species-Area Relationship

Species-Distance Relationship

Page 56: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Immigration varies with the distance of the island from the mainland

• More distant islands are colonized less frequently.

• The rate of colonization declines as species richness increases,because there are fewer potential colonists and fewer unexploited niches.

• More distant islands have lower species richness

Rat

e

Page 57: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Extinction varies with the size of the island

• Large islands can support larger population sizes, and large populations are less prone to extinction. So, the smaller the island, the greater the probability of extinction.

• Extinction rates rise as species richness increases, as a result ofincreased interspecific competition for limited resources.

• Small islands have lower species richness

Rat

e

Page 58: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

What type of island is predicted to have the greatest number of species at equilibrium?

Together, island size and island isolation shape patterns of species richness

Page 59: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

What type of island is predicted to have the greatest rate of species turnover?

Species Turnover

Page 60: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

The Theory of Island Biogeography

Equilibrium theory and non-equilibrium theory make very different predictions

about the diversity of species on islands

Page 61: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

The Theory of Island Biogeography

Equilibrium theory and non-equilibrium theory make very different predictions

about the diversity of species on islands

• Equilibrium theory predicts that island species richness will remain constant

over time, whereas non-equilibrium theory predicts that species richness

will increase over time

• Equilibrium theory predicts that although species richness will remain

constant, species composition will change over time (species turnover)

Page 62: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Testing the Theory of Island Biogeography

Wilson & Simberloff (1969)

Page 63: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

• Arthropod richness matched pre-treatment levels(species richness remains constant per island)

• Species composition differed from pre-treatmentcommunities

Page 64: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Plant diversity in the South Pacific

Circles: near islands

Triangles: distant islands

Page 65: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Limitations to the equilibrium theory

Page 66: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Limitations to the equilibrium theory

1. Relationships between immigration rates(or extinction rates) and species richnessmay not be linear

Page 67: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

1. Relationships between immigration rates(or extinction rates) and species richnessmay not be linear

2. Individuals may arrive from neighboring islands(not just from the mainland)

Limitations to the equilibrium theory

Page 68: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

1. Relationships between immigration rates(or extinction rates) and species richnessmay not be linear

2. Individuals may arrive from neighboring islands(not just from the mainland)

3. All species are assumed to be equal, regardlessof differences in dispersal ability, competitiveability, etc.

Limitations to the equilibrium theory

Page 69: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

How might Island Biogeography theory inform reserve design and species conservation?

Application of the equilibrium theory

Page 70: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

1. We can use the theory to predict the effects of habitat fragmentation

2. Knowledge of species-area effects can inform the design of nature reserves that will maximize long-term species diversity

Habitat fragmentationMajor drivers of biodiversity loss

How might Island Biogeography theory inform reserve design and species conservation?

Application of the equilibrium theory

Page 71: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Principles of Reserve DesignWhy

• may support more species and largerpopulations; more interior per edge

• intact better than fragmented; moreinterior per edge; no dispersal issues

• easier to disperse among patches(increases likelihood of recolonization)

• easier to disperse among multiple patches

• corridors facilitate dispersal

• the amount of edge (relative to area)is minimized when a reserve is round

Page 72: Island Biogeography - plant physplantphys.info/bahamas/copyright/islandbiogeography.pdfThe Theory of Island Biogeography Islands generally contain fewer species than mainland habitats

Island Biogeography

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