Exploring the avian biodiversity of Africa with different species concepts
Posted on: Tuesday, 27 September 2005, 13:50 CDT
A recent debate over the usefulness and relevance of the widely used Biological Species Concept, based on reproductive isolation, versus the Phylogenetic Species Concept, which is centred around identifying the smallest group with common ancestry, has raised concerns that changing nomenclatural foundations might result in the appearance of previously unrecognized patterns of biodiversity.
A recent study, published in the journal Ecography evaluates this suggestion on a continental scale for the first time, using a dataset that encompasses the entire bird fauna of sub-Saharan Africa. Identifying 1,572 biological species defined in the African 'Atlas of Speciation' and 2,098 phylogenetic species, the study found that large-scale patterns of species richness and endemisms were remarkably robust to changes in species concepts. By in-depth analysis, the study was able to document further complexity within long-recognized centres of endemism.
Both species concepts agree on their view on endemism, with certain areas acting as "species pumps" and large intervening areas being characterised by a predominance of widespread species, which distribute themselves in accordance with contemporary environmental conditions.
On the World Wide Web:
Related Articles
- Sea Star Species Grow Better With Elevated Water Temperature, Acidity
- Bacteria move between species, study finds
- Rethinking the Definition and Classification of Microbial Species
- Study: Herbivores Have Ecosystem Impact
- Bird Species Are Saved From Extinction
- British moths fall by a third in 35 years -study
- Researchers Say Five Deep-Water Fish Species Qualify for Endangered Status
- Reconciling Classical and Molecular Phylogenies in the Stichotrichines (Ciliophora, Spirotrichea), Including New Sequences From Some Rare Species
- Extrapair Paternity in Birds: Understanding Variation Among Species
- Altered gene expression in three plant species
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds