diversity: alpha – beta – gamma

24
Diversity: alpha beta – gamma

Upload: ethel

Post on 04-Jan-2016

399 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Diversity: alpha – beta – gamma. Beta diversity is a concept that helps us to cope with the fact that not every species lives everywhere. Whittaker 1972.  =   avg. Lande 1996.  =  avg + . Beta diversity indices. Koleff et al. 2003 J anim Ecol 72:367. Jaccard. Sorensen. 1-. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Diversity: alpha – beta – gamma

Page 2: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Area

Sp

ec

ies

ALPHA

BETA GAMMA

Beta diversity is a concept that helps us to cope with the fact that not every species lives everywhere

= avg +

= avg

Whittaker 1972

Lande 1996

Page 3: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma
Page 4: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Koleff et al. 2003 J anim Ecol 72:367

Beta diversity indices

Page 5: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Sorensen

Lennon et al.

Koleff et al. 2003 J anim Ecol 72:367

Jaccard"Broad sense" measuresincorporate differences in species richness as well as differences in composition

"Narrow sense" measuresindependent of differences in species richness

Example 1a = 10, b = 10, c = 100Jaccard = 10/120 = 0.08Sorensen = 20/130 = 0.15Lennon = 1- 10/20 = 0.5

1-

Example 2a = 10, b = 10, c = 1000Jaccard = 10/1020 = 0.010Sorensen = 20/1030 = 0.019Lennon = 1- 10/20 = 0.5

Page 6: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

ßAB

A

FE

DC

B

ßBD

ßDF

ßAC

ßCE

ßEF

ßCDLa

titu

de

tem

pe

rate

tro

pic

al

Altitudelowland montane

Beta diversity along e.g. latitudinal gradient:• change in community composition measured by beta diversity• change in beta diversity

Page 7: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Latitudinal gradient in alpha diversity – owls

Koleff et al. 2003

Page 8: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

focal area

Koleff et al. 2003

Latitudinal gradient in A, B, C parameters – owls

for adjacent pairs of quadrats

A

B C

Page 9: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Beta diversity A/(A+B+C) of owls along latitudinal gradient

Koleff et al. 2003

Page 10: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Amphibians

Birds

Mammals

Beta diversity of vertebrates

decrease in species overlap over 500 km

Page 11: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Reyers et al. 2000

Beta diversity and optimum selection of protected areas

1. select the most species rich plot2. add the plot bringing the highest

number of new species

1. select the plot with the rarest species 2. add the plot with the rarest

unrepresented species

richness-based algorithm rarity-based algorithm

Page 12: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Causes of species turnover in space

Speciation and dispersal limitation: species migration ability vs. barriers

Biological interactions: competitive exclusion from suitable habitats

Habitat availability: biotic and abiotic resources and limiting factors

Apparent species turnover:species too rare to be sampled

Page 13: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Speciation and dispersal limitation: the Hubbell’s (2001) neutral model

- all species ecologically identical - species turnover generated by dispersal limitation

The probability F(r) that 2 trees r km apart are conspecific is modelled as depending on: speciation rate , mean dispersal distance and population density is predicted to decrease linearly with log r

Page 14: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Habitat availability: altitudinal gradient, the mother of all environmental gradients

Ficus copiosa in New Guinea raingorest: 2 samples of 200 caterpillars 150 km apart

0

15

30

45

lowland x lowland lowland x montane

% o

f s

ha

red

sp

ec

ies

Page 15: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

0

2

4

6

8

10

low high

Altitude

No.

of s

peci

es

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

low high

Altitude

Bet

a di

vers

ity [1

-Jac

card

] .

Two modes of altitudinal species turnover:with complete nestedness and zero nestedness

Identical altitudinal trends in species richness meandifferent trends in mean altitudinal range of species and beta diversity between adjacent altitudes

Page 16: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Species turnover along altitudinal gradients: Rhododendron spp. on Mt. Kinabalu

Rhododendrones: 900 spp. worldwide, 300 spp. in SE Asia, 50 spp. in Borneo, 25 spp. on Mt. Kinabalu, incl. 5 endemic spp.

Page 17: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Altitudinal distribution of 454 bird species in Papua New Guinea

0 m asl.

4500 m asl.

K. Tvardikova, unpubl. data

each row is 100 m elevation belt, each column a bird species

Page 18: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Biological interactions: “checkerboard” distributions

Altitudinal segregation of competing parrots in New Guinea:

Language distribution among tribal societies:

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

Mt. Niba SepikMts.

Mt.Karimui

KarkarIs.

Tolokiwa NewBritain

Alti

tude

(m

)

Charmosyna placentalis C. rubronotata C. rubrigularis

Page 19: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Diamond, J.M. (1975) Community Ecology

“Checkeboard distribution” - not predicted by island biogeography

Cockoo-dove Macropygia mackinlayi and M. nigrirostris

M. nigrirostris

M. mackinlayi

Page 20: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Checkerboard distribution: Zosterops birds in New Guinea

Page 21: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Zosterops chloris

Zosterops atriceps

Page 22: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

Herpetofauna on British Virgin Islands:a nested pattern of species distribution

Page 23: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

(a) a maximally cold matrix, (b) actual data, small mammals in Rocky Mts., (c), (d) matrices randomly filled under successively relaxed constraints [Patterson & Atmar 1986].

spec

ies

islands

Nestedness can be used to determine

extinction probabilities

Page 24: Diversity:  alpha  – beta –  gamma

U = 1/(mn) i j uij

T = U/Umax * 100

Matrix temperature T