Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Anthelme Fabien, Jacobsen D., Macek P., Meneses R. I., Moret P., Beck S., Dangles Olivier. (2014). Biodiversity patterns and continental insularity in the tropical High Andes. Arctic Antarctic and Alpine Research, 46 (4), p. 811-828. ISSN 1523-0430.

Titre du document
Biodiversity patterns and continental insularity in the tropical High Andes
Année de publication
2014
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000346219500011
Auteurs
Anthelme Fabien, Jacobsen D., Macek P., Meneses R. I., Moret P., Beck S., Dangles Olivier
Source
Arctic Antarctic and Alpine Research, 2014, 46 (4), p. 811-828 ISSN 1523-0430
Alpine areas of the tropical Andes constitute the largest of all tropical alpine regions worldwide. They experience a particularly harsh climate, and they are fragmented into tropical alpine islands at various spatial scales. These factors generate unique patterns of continental insularity, whose impacts on biodiversity remain to be examined precisely. By reviewing existing literature and by presenting unpublished data on beta-diversity and endemism for a wide array of taxonomic groups, we aimed at providing a clear, overall picture of the isolation-biodiversity relationship in the tropical alpine environments of the Andes. Our analyses showed that (1) taxa with better dispersal capacities and wider distributions (e.g., grasses and birds) were less restricted to alpine areas at local scale; (2) similarity among communities decreased with spatial distance between isolated alpine areas; and (3) endemism reached a peak in small alpine areas strongly isolated from main alpine islands. These results pinpoint continental insularity as a powerful driver of biodiversity in the tropical High Andes. A combination of human activities and warming is expected to increase the effects of continental insularity in the next decades, especially by amplifying the resistance of the lowland matrix that surrounds tropical alpine islands.
Plan de classement
Sciences du milieu [021] ; Etudes, transformation, conservation du milieu naturel [082]
Description Géographique
ANDES ; ZONE TROPICALE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010063090]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010063090
Contact