Species richness: patterns in the diversity of life
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Berlin [u.a.]
Springer [u.a.]
2009
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Schriftenreihe: | Springer Praxis books in environmental sciences
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVII, 380 S. Ill., graph. Darst. Kt. |
ISBN: | 9783540742777 3540742778 |
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adam_text | Titel: Species richness
Autor: Adams, Jonathan
Jahr: 2009
Contents
Preface............................................. xiii
List of figures........................................ xv
List of tables......................................... xix
List of abbreviations and acronyms........................... xxi
1 Local-scale patterns in species richness...................... 1
1.1 Local-scale trends in species richness................... 1
1.2 What is species richness?........................... 1
1.3 What is meant by local variations in species richness?...... 3
1.4 Local-scale patterns are most noticeable in organisms that don t
move around much.............................. 4
1.5 A related and important question: How do species coexist any-
wherel...................................... 4
1.6 Different scales of species richness, from local to geographical . . 14
1.7 A varied environment tends to allow more species in........ 16
1.8 Using models to validate the logic of the role of disturbance in
allowing coexistence.............................. 21
1.9 Do humpback curves really occur along disturbance gradients?. . 23
1.10 Grime and Tilman: disturbance creates other sorts of opportu-
nities for coexistence, and variation in levels of disturbance affects
these opportunities............................... 25
1.11 When strategies mix—the humpback curve with succession, after a
disturbance.................................... 26
1.12 The other humpback curve: along gradients in nutrient levels . 27
1.13 Species richness is a balancing act between the effects of disturb-
ance and nutrients............................... 33
vi Contents
1.14 Why hasn t a humpbacked diversity curve been found for
animals?..................................... 35
1.15 A quite different explanation for humpbacked diversity curves in
plants, in relation to soil fertility..................... 37
1.16 Poisoned and extreme environments are usually poor in
species....................................... 40
1.17 Mountain-scale patterns in species richness............... 41
1.18 Patterns of species richness with depth in the oceans........ 44
1.19 Some conclusions about local-scale patterns in species richness. . 45
2 The Holy Grail of ecology: Latitudinal gradients............... 47
2.1 Latitudinal trends............................... 47
2.2 The discovery of latitudinal trends.................... 48
2.3 Explaining latitudinal gradients...................... 55
2.4 Non-equilibrium theories: species richness can just keep on rising 60
2.4.1 The effects of ice ages....................... 60
2.4.2 The tropics are more benign ................. 64
2.4.3 A general test of the disequilibrium theories: Has the
build-up of species richness continued over time?..... 79
2.5 Equilibrium theories: there is a lid on species richness that is
higher in the low latitudes.......................... 81
2.5.1 The tropics are just bigger.................... 81
2.5.2 More energy, more food in warmer climates: the species-
energy hypothesis ......................... 81
2.5.3 More strongly seasonal environments mean less chance of
occupying a narrow, specialized niche............. 85
2.5.4 More specialized enemies of plants mean more species can
exist side by side at lower latitudes (the Janzen-Connell
hypothesis).............................. 87
2.5.5 The latitudinal gradient is produced by a balance between
growth and disturbance...................... 92
2.6 The pros and cons of the various theories for latitudinal gradients 94
3 Deep time and mass extinctions.......................... 97
3.1 The depth of time............................... 97
3.2 Species richness can change on a range of time scales........ 98
3.3 Sampling the past: the fossil record and species richness...... 98
3.4 The broadest scale picture of biological richness, since the
beginning of life on Earth.......................... 100
3.5 What caused the sudden initial increase in diversity 540 Myr ago? 105
3.5.1 What could have caused the explosion of animal life after
600 Myr ago?............................. 106
3.5.2 Is the Cambrian Explosion just an effect of better preser-
vation? ................................. 107
3.6 How many species have ever existed?.................. 108
Contents vii
3.7 Background extinction............................ 110
3.7.1 The causes of background extinction............. 110
3.8 Mass extinctions................................ 113
3.9 The main mass extinctions......................... 113
3.10 The end-Permian mass extinction..................... 114
3.11 The end-Cretaceous mass extinction................... 116
3.12 The end-Ordovician mass extinction................... 117
3.13 Other mass extinctions............................ 118
3.14 Mass extinctions affected species inhabiting many different envir-
onments...................................... 118
3.15 The causes of mass extinctions....................... 119
3.16 Were mass extinctions sudden, or gradual?............... 119
3.17 The paradigm shift towards acceptance of sudden mass extinctions 121
3.18 There is evidence for dramatic environmental upheaval during
mass extinctions................................ 122
3.19 Global collapse of ecosystems is associated with the Biggest
Two mass extinctions............................ 122
3.20 Death of vegetation.............................. 124
3.21 Empty seas................................... 126
3.22 Carbon-12 shifts in the oceans and what they might mean .... 126
3.23 The Strangelove Ocean............................ 127
3.24 Sudden temperature swings......................... 128
3.25 The aftermath of mass extinctions: disaster taxa........... 130
3.26 Causes of mass extinctions......................... 131
3.27 Did meteorite impacts bring about mass extinctions? The end-
Cretaceous impact............................... 132
3.28 Did a meteorite cause the end-Permian extinction? ......... 136
3.29 Other possible impact events at times of mass extinction...... 137
3.30 Volcanic eruptions as a cause of mass extinctions.......... 137
3.31 Stagnant, burping oceans as a cause of mass extinctions...... 139
3.32 The end-Paleocene extinction in the deep sea............. 142
3.33 Mass extinctions and ice ages....................... 144
3.34 Is there a cycle of mass extinctions?................... 145
3.35 Diversification and recovery......................... 146
3.36 Dead clades walking ............................ 147
3.37 The role of luck in the history of life.................. 148
3.38 Beyond the mass extinctions: The story of tropical rainforest
diversity...................................... 149
3.39 The Quaternary ice ages........................... 152
3.40 The ice ages and diversity in temperate-zone forests......... 156
3.41 Ice ages may create as well as destroy temperate species...... 162
3.42 What ice ages did to tropical rainforest diversity........... 163
Hotspots and coldspots................................ 167
4.1 Geographical patchiness in species richness............... 167
viii Contents
4.2 Hotspots..................................... 167
4.3 Some examples of hotspots in species richness............. 168
4.3.1 The big lakes of eastern Africa................. 168
4.3.2 The western Cape of South Africa............... 170
4.3.3 Lake Baikal in Siberia....................... 171
4.3.4 The mallee scrub of southwestern Australia......... 172
4.3.5 The western edge of Amazonia................. 172
4.4 What causes hotspots?............................ 177
4.4.1 The stable environments hypothesis.............. 177
4.4.2 The story of the Cape hotspot.................. 178
4.4.3 The story of Baikal......................... 179
4.4.4 The story of the African Rift Valley lakes.......... 180
4.4.5 The story of the southwest Australian mallee........ 182
4.4.6 The story of the Amazon hotspots............... 182
4.5 Some conclusions: how important is long-term stability for hot-
spots? ....................................... 184
4.6 Peculiarities of local ecology: Are these what it takes to set off a
hotspot?..................................... 184
4.6.1 What is peculiar about the Cape?............... 185
4.6.2 What is special about the cichlids in African lakes?.... 186
4.6.3 What could be peculiar about the western and central
Amazonian forest hotspots?................... 187
4.7 Do hotspots have more room for species, or have they just been
given and retained more species?..................... 190
4.8 Coldspots..................................... 190
4.9 Explanations for why diversity coldspots occur............ 191
4.9.1 Island coldspots........................... 191
4.9.2 Island biogeography on land and in lakes.......... 196
4.9.3 Some experimental tests of MacArthur and Wilson s
hypothesis............................... 197
4.10 The peninsula effect.............................. 199
4.11 Bursts of speciation on islands....................... 200
4.12 Coldspots made through glacial extinctions............... 201
5 The march of Cain: Humans as a destroyer of species............ 205
5.1 The human species.............................. 205
5.2 Humans and the extinction of other humans............. 206
5.3 The secrets of our success over other human species........ 210
5.4 Survival of species diversity during the Quaternary......... 211
5.5 Yet mammals and birds have suffered a great wave of extinctions 214
5.6 Africa, 150,000 years ago.......................... 214
5.7 Australia, 45,000 years ago......................... 215
5.8 A second wave of extinction: the Americas and Eurasia...... 216
5.9 Did climate change cause the extinctions on continents between
45,000 and 10,000 years ago? ....................... 218
Contents ix
5.9.1 An Australian drought....................... 219
5.9.2 A thaw, then a freeze....................... 219
5.10 Coincidence of extinctions with human arrival—did the humans
do it?....................................... 225
5.10.1 When exactly did humans arrive? ............... 225
5.10.2 A blitzkrieg on animals in the Americas and Australia? 226
5.10.3 Modeling humans driving Quaternary megafauna extinct 230
5.10.4 Problems in the dating: Did Australian animals really die
out just as humans arrived?................... 233
5.10.5 An explanation for the delay in Europe and the Americas:
A double-whammy combination of climate change and
over-hunting? ............................ 234
5.10.6 Smaller animals tended to survive............... 236
5.10.7 Fire-setting by humans in the Australian extinctions? . . 237
5.10.8 Or was it a disease? Or meteorites?.............. 238
5.11 The wave of extinction spreads to islands............... 239
5.11.1 The last mammoths: Wrangel and St. Paul Island .... 239
5.11.2 Mediterranean islands....................... 240
5.11.3 Madagascar: lemurs and elephant birds............ 241
5.11.4 Several thousand islands: the story of the Pacific..... 242
5.11.5 New Zealand and the moas................... 244
5.11.6 The Hawaiian islands and their birds............. 245
5.11.7 Mauritius and the dodo...................... 246
5.11.8 St. Helena and its daisy trees.................. 247
5.11.9 Guam and its ground-nesting birds............... 248
5.12 Why were island species so susceptible to extinction?........ 249
5.13 Back to the mainland............................ 250
5.13.1 The great auk............................ 251
5.13.2 The passenger pigeon........................ 252
5.13.3 The Carolina parakeet....................... 253
5.13.4 The thylacine............................. 254
5.13.5 Yangtze River dolphin....................... 255
5.13.6 Cichlids in African lakes..................... 255
5.14 Current extinction, seen and unseen................... 256
Knowing what is out there.............................. 259
6.1 Nature s current totals............................ 259
6.2 Identifying new life forms—taxonomy and its challenges...... 262
6.3 The stages in discovery of a new species................ 263
6.3.1 Collection............................... 264
6.3.2 Identification............................. 264
6.3.3 Description and naming...................... 265
6.4 The uncertainties in current estimates of species richness...... 266
6.5 The deep oceans: a big unknown..................... 270
6.6 Other tricks for estimating unknown species richness........ 271
x Contents
6.7 A bounty of nematodes?........................... 272
6.8 A plethora of mites?............................. 272
6.9 Estimating the unknown species richness of tropical insects .... 273
6.10 So, how many types of arthropods are there? ............ 277
6.11 Cryptic diversity................................ 277
6.12 False species diversity: species complexes................ 279
6.13 The hidden world of microbial diversity................. 280
6.14 Nature still yields surprises......................... 282
6.15 The shadowy world of cryptozoology.................. 282
6.16 The twilight world of species richness.................. 285
7 The current threats.................................. 287
7.1 The greenhouse effect and extinctions.................. 288
7.2 Species ranges changing under global warming............ 290
7.2.1 Clues from the past......................... 295
7.2.2 Polar environments under global warming.......... 296
7.3 Mountains under climate change..................... 297
7.4 Coral reefs.................................... 298
7.5 Global warming in the longer term.................... 300
7.6 Direct CO2 fertilization effects on plants................ 301
7.7 The other direct CO2 effect, acidification of the oceans..... 307
7.8 Introduced species............................... 310
7.8.1 Argentine ants and the fynbos.................. 312
7.9 The amphibian decline............................ 312
7.10 Tree diseases.................................. 314
7.11 Habitat clearance............................... 316
8 Holding on to what is left.............................. 323
8.1 Conserving habitat............................... 323
8.2 International biosphere reserves and world heritage sites...... 326
8.3 Uncertainties about species richness: a problem for conservation. 327
8.4 Minimum viable population size...................... 328
8.5 Metapopulations: a complication to minimum viable population
sizes........................................ 333
8.5.1 The shapes and sizes of reserves................ 333
8.6 How much do nature reserves lose? Relaxation extinction..... 337
8.7 Active management of reserves....................... 341
8.8 Maintaining reserves in a changeable climate............. 343
8.9 Aiding plant migration—planting..................... 344
8.10 Taxonomy as the arbiter of fate...................... 346
8.11 Botanic gardens and zoos.......................... 347
8.12 Botanic gardens................................ 349
8.13 Seed and embryo banks........................... 351
8.14 In vitro storage of plant genetic material................ 353
Contents xi
8.15 Rescue through genetic engineering and breeding, against intro-
duced pests and diseases........................... 354
8.16 Back from the dead: Can we regain animals that have already
gone extinct?.................................. 357
8.17 Warning labels: alerting governments and the public of a species
in trouble..................................... 359
8.18 Laws........................................ 360
8.19 Where we stand now............................. 362
References........................................... 365
Index.............................................. 379
|
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author | Adams, Jonathan |
author_GND | (DE-588)138100985 |
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dewey-ones | 577 - Ecology |
dewey-raw | 577 |
dewey-search | 577 |
dewey-sort | 3577 |
dewey-tens | 570 - Biology |
discipline | Biologie |
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spelling | Adams, Jonathan Verfasser (DE-588)138100985 aut Species richness patterns in the diversity of life Jonathan Adams Berlin [u.a.] Springer [u.a.] 2009 XVII, 380 S. Ill., graph. Darst. Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Springer Praxis books in environmental sciences Biodiversität (DE-588)4601495-0 gnd rswk-swf Arealkunde (DE-588)4142980-1 gnd rswk-swf Biogeografie (DE-588)4006801-8 gnd rswk-swf Evolution (DE-588)4071050-6 gnd rswk-swf Biodiversität (DE-588)4601495-0 s DE-604 Biogeografie (DE-588)4006801-8 s Evolution (DE-588)4071050-6 s Arealkunde (DE-588)4142980-1 s DE-188 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=020130599&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Adams, Jonathan Species richness patterns in the diversity of life Biodiversität (DE-588)4601495-0 gnd Arealkunde (DE-588)4142980-1 gnd Biogeografie (DE-588)4006801-8 gnd Evolution (DE-588)4071050-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4601495-0 (DE-588)4142980-1 (DE-588)4006801-8 (DE-588)4071050-6 |
title | Species richness patterns in the diversity of life |
title_auth | Species richness patterns in the diversity of life |
title_exact_search | Species richness patterns in the diversity of life |
title_full | Species richness patterns in the diversity of life Jonathan Adams |
title_fullStr | Species richness patterns in the diversity of life Jonathan Adams |
title_full_unstemmed | Species richness patterns in the diversity of life Jonathan Adams |
title_short | Species richness |
title_sort | species richness patterns in the diversity of life |
title_sub | patterns in the diversity of life |
topic | Biodiversität (DE-588)4601495-0 gnd Arealkunde (DE-588)4142980-1 gnd Biogeografie (DE-588)4006801-8 gnd Evolution (DE-588)4071050-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Biodiversität Arealkunde Biogeografie Evolution |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=020130599&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT adamsjonathan speciesrichnesspatternsinthediversityoflife |