2014
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1276
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Determinants of bird species richness, endemism, and island network roles in Wallacea and the West Indies: is geography sufficient or does current and historical climate matter?

Abstract: Island biogeography has greatly contributed to our understanding of the processes determining species' distributions. Previous research has focused on the effects of island geography (i.e., island area, elevation, and isolation) and current climate as drivers of island species richness and endemism. Here, we evaluate the potential additional effects of historical climate on breeding land bird richness and endemism in Wallacea and the West Indies. Furthermore, on the basis of species distributions, we identify … Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…Hence, the relationship between species richness, phylogenetic signal and environmental factors and network structure may differ between mainland and insular communities. For instance, the influence of historical climate change may be weaker on islands than on the mainland (Dalsgaard et al ., , ). As our dataset contains too few island networks ( n = 9) to allow for a separate analysis for insular networks, we explored putative differences in mainland and island networks by analysing a subset of the dataset composed exclusively by networks from the mainland (Mainland; n = 45 networks) and compared these results with those of the entire dataset (Global dataset, which includes both mainland and insular communities; n = 54 networks).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, the relationship between species richness, phylogenetic signal and environmental factors and network structure may differ between mainland and insular communities. For instance, the influence of historical climate change may be weaker on islands than on the mainland (Dalsgaard et al ., , ). As our dataset contains too few island networks ( n = 9) to allow for a separate analysis for insular networks, we explored putative differences in mainland and island networks by analysing a subset of the dataset composed exclusively by networks from the mainland (Mainland; n = 45 networks) and compared these results with those of the entire dataset (Global dataset, which includes both mainland and insular communities; n = 54 networks).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this context, network analysis is a promising and powerful tool for understanding island connectivity (Dos Santos et al ., ), as it provides a holistic approach, free of a priori dataset assumptions, which is better than pairwise analyses for assessing interactions within complex datasets (Proulx et al ., ). Network biogeographical analysis based on species distributions is an objective, optimal and emerging method for the identification of biogeographical regions within an archipelago (Carstensen et al ., , ; Dalsgaard et al ., ; Kougioumoutzis et al ., ). Netcarto (Guimerá & Amaral, ) is a module‐detecting algorithm, used among others, in ecological (Olesen et al ., ) and biogeographical studies (Carstensen et al ., , ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this approach the network is bipartite, with two sets of nodes; locations and taxa, with the taxa linked to locations in which they are present. The modularity SA method has been used in several studies to delineate biogeographical regions (Carstensen and Olesen 2009, Carstensen et al 2012, 2013a, Thébault 2013, Dalsgaard et al 2014). One commonly used network method is Netcarto.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…clusters of areas and species that are associated with each other (Carstensen et al 2012(Carstensen et al , 2013a) and it has been mainly applied to the bioregionalisation of archipelagos (Carstensen and Olesen 2009, Carstensen et al 2012, Dalsgaard et al 2014, Kougioumoutzis et al 2014. clusters of areas and species that are associated with each other (Carstensen et al 2012(Carstensen et al , 2013a) and it has been mainly applied to the bioregionalisation of archipelagos (Carstensen and Olesen 2009, Carstensen et al 2012, Dalsgaard et al 2014, Kougioumoutzis et al 2014.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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