Week 5 – The Abundance and Distribution of Species

Week 5 Reading:

Macroecology: Chapter 4

Roy, K. et al. 2009. A macroevolutionary perspective on species range limits. Proc. R. Soc. B 276: 1485-1493.

There are many inherent problems with documenting a species’ range. Primarily, it is hard to visualize on a large scale. However, Dr. Brown points out some general patterns across taxa and space.

Dr. Brown lays out three separate models to explain a species’ distribution: a continuous model in which abundance is greatest in the center of the range, a distribution in which one edge of the range borders a severely unfavorable habitat and abruptly ends, and a distribution in which there are multiple peaks in density due to heterogeneity. It is striking that spatial distributions of taxa across space are so similar. For instance, the example given on pg. 55 (Fig. 4.5) shows that the abundance of a species is orders of magnitude greater in one area of its range and rare towards some edge – and this is repeatable across taxa and remains stable throughout time!

Another pattern Dr. Brown points out is the observation by Charles Darwin that there are few abundant species and many rare species. Again, this pattern is seen within all taxonomic groups. It is noteworthy to point out that the widely distributed species are more numerous in a particular habitat than the species that are well adapted to that habitat. The mechanism proposed by Dr. Brown is that species that become specialist have a trade-off: be highly competitive in one habitat at the loss of tolerating a wider range of abiotic factors. It is curious that this relationship only holds for assemblages of closely related species or those that occupy similar ecological guilds; I would have expected similar species to diverge rather than be conserved.

Roy et al. (2009) proposes that the reason for such conservatism is due to evolutionary history setting range limits for species. In this study, the researchers find an asymmetry between what factors set the northern and southern range limits. Using a macroevolutionary approach, the researchers showed that range limits are most influenced by species richness (number of species within a genus) than by age of a lineage. That is, as the number of species increases within a genus, there is a higher chance of diversifying to new habitats and climatic regimes. They claim that this is due to bivalves restricting their range during times of glaciations (effect of evolutionary history affecting modern species), and then expanding, which resulted in speciation within genera as a means to expand geographic range rather than old clades occupying one continuous range from the tropics to the poles.


Are these results intuitive? How does this paleobiological study compare to modern observations discussed in Macroecology?

Comments

  1. In the book chapter Jim discusses distribution being conserved phylogenetically, but also within similar ecological groups. I wonder what kinds of results a similar study (as in the Roy paper) would produce if instead the bivalves were divided into ecological functional groups (epifaunal, infaunal, etc.)?

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  2. This paper was really cool! Not that the rest haven't been really cool too! Anyway, one question what is Roy talking about with age? age of the organism or age as in evolutionary time? I agree with Mel on maybe dividing the families and genera differently? or maybe using a more ecosytematic approach? Overall, this paper was cool to assist with our understanding of future climatic changes an what some species will do in response. Oh, almost forgot, I am slightly skeptical about the relation to macroecology? Talk to you guys in class!!!

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  3. Hey folks! Several things. First of all, this was a great article choice. I really enjoyed reading it. I think it brings up the point that, as paleontologists, it's nearly impossible to talk about macroecology without also talking about macroevolution.
    Secondly, and more relevant to the actual article, I think this was a very elegant study. They used an taxon that's highly diverse and abundant in the fossil record to test a very general pattern. I appreciate their quantitative approach, (which is probably in no small part due to Gene Hunt, one of the authors and the guy who taught me almost everything I know about data analysis.) A term that you might not know from the paper is Akaike Weights (more info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akaike_information_criterion) which we should touch on in class.
    Finally, and almost unrelated, how did these guys get funding from NASA for this study? I need to hit that.

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  4. I really liked Dr. Brown's definition of the possible range types; how exactly is the "range" defined in this sense? Are we talking about populations of the species, or about the species' entire existance?

    The paper was a little confusing to me. I just kept thinking, "well, yeah, of course it looks like that..." It seemed like common sense to me. That said, I thought the paper was well done. Unless I missed something completely...

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  5. I will have to admit my head has been clouded with cold medication all week. The paper was interesting and well written, I did not have a chance to go over the electronic sup. materials, so I am going to take their word for it on the methods. I am not sure about the use of latitude to describe range, it seems it would be a good terrestrial indicator, but not the most reliable aquatic range measurement, based on the thermal patterns of water. But i really was not able to get my head into the article and I probably missed a large part of it. Should be good discussion looking forward to it.

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  6. AHHHHH!!!! Everyone I am so sorry but I am not going to be able to make class today :( My dog got in a fight when he escaped minutes ago... My roommates are unavailable at the time. I am about to take him to the emergency vet an I hope that I will be back in time to catch some discussion... I apologize greatly for this, it will not happen again. Hope to see you all in class.

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  7. Oh and my comment on the chapter will be posted after vet adventure... Or I will bring it to class and post later!!!

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  8. Overall I enjoyed reading the article. It presents a very interesting study and approach when it comes to patterns of distribution. I'm not very familiar with bivalve biology so I was wondering how unresolved the phylogeny is. It was also mentioned that the actuall processes that determine the distribution limits remain unknown, what are some of the processes that are proposed currenlty? Overall I enjoyed the paper I was just a little confused with some of the terminology and details of the study.

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