Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients.

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Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients. / Nogues, David Bravo; Araújo, M B; Romdal, T; Rahbek, C.

In: Nature, Vol. 453, No. 7192, 2008, p. 216-219.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nogues, DB, Araújo, MB, Romdal, T & Rahbek, C 2008, 'Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients.', Nature, vol. 453, no. 7192, pp. 216-219. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature06812

APA

Nogues, D. B., Araújo, M. B., Romdal, T., & Rahbek, C. (2008). Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients. Nature, 453(7192), 216-219. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature06812

Vancouver

Nogues DB, Araújo MB, Romdal T, Rahbek C. Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients. Nature. 2008;453(7192):216-219. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature06812

Author

Nogues, David Bravo ; Araújo, M B ; Romdal, T ; Rahbek, C. / Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients. In: Nature. 2008 ; Vol. 453, No. 7192. pp. 216-219.

Bibtex

@article{849ac790ac2011ddb5e9000ea68e967b,
title = "Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients.",
abstract = "Despite two centuries of effort in characterizing environmental gradients of species richness in search of universal patterns, surprisingly few of these patterns have been widely acknowledged. Species richness along altitudinal gradients was previously assumed to increase universally from cool highlands to warm lowlands, mirroring the latitudinal increase in species richness from cool to warm latitudes. However, since the more recent general acceptance of altitudinal gradients as model templates for testing hypotheses behind large-scale patterns of diversity, these gradients have been used in support of all the main diversity hypotheses, although little consensus has been achieved. Here we show that when resampling a data set comprising 400,000 records for 3,046 Pyrenean floristic species at different scales of analysis (achieved by varying grain size and the extent of the gradients sampled), the derived species richness pattern changed progressively from hump-shaped to a monotonic pattern as the scale of extent diminished. Scale effects alone gave rise to as many conflicting patterns of species richness as had previously been reported in the literature, and scale effects lent significantly different statistical support to competing diversity hypotheses. Effects of scale on current studies may be affected by human activities, because montane ecosystems and human activities are intimately connected. This interdependence has led to a global reduction in natural lowland habitats, hampering our ability to detect universal patterns and impeding the search for universal diversity gradients to discover the mechanisms determining the distribution of biological diversity on Earth.",
author = "Nogues, {David Bravo} and Ara{\'u}jo, {M B} and T Romdal and C Rahbek",
note = "Keywords: Altitude; Biodiversity; Computer Simulation; Costa Rica; Human Activities; Models, Biological; Software; Spain; Trees; Tropical Climate",
year = "2008",
doi = "10.1038/nature06812",
language = "English",
volume = "453",
pages = "216--219",
journal = "Nature",
issn = "0028-0836",
publisher = "nature publishing group",
number = "7192",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients.

AU - Nogues, David Bravo

AU - Araújo, M B

AU - Romdal, T

AU - Rahbek, C

N1 - Keywords: Altitude; Biodiversity; Computer Simulation; Costa Rica; Human Activities; Models, Biological; Software; Spain; Trees; Tropical Climate

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - Despite two centuries of effort in characterizing environmental gradients of species richness in search of universal patterns, surprisingly few of these patterns have been widely acknowledged. Species richness along altitudinal gradients was previously assumed to increase universally from cool highlands to warm lowlands, mirroring the latitudinal increase in species richness from cool to warm latitudes. However, since the more recent general acceptance of altitudinal gradients as model templates for testing hypotheses behind large-scale patterns of diversity, these gradients have been used in support of all the main diversity hypotheses, although little consensus has been achieved. Here we show that when resampling a data set comprising 400,000 records for 3,046 Pyrenean floristic species at different scales of analysis (achieved by varying grain size and the extent of the gradients sampled), the derived species richness pattern changed progressively from hump-shaped to a monotonic pattern as the scale of extent diminished. Scale effects alone gave rise to as many conflicting patterns of species richness as had previously been reported in the literature, and scale effects lent significantly different statistical support to competing diversity hypotheses. Effects of scale on current studies may be affected by human activities, because montane ecosystems and human activities are intimately connected. This interdependence has led to a global reduction in natural lowland habitats, hampering our ability to detect universal patterns and impeding the search for universal diversity gradients to discover the mechanisms determining the distribution of biological diversity on Earth.

AB - Despite two centuries of effort in characterizing environmental gradients of species richness in search of universal patterns, surprisingly few of these patterns have been widely acknowledged. Species richness along altitudinal gradients was previously assumed to increase universally from cool highlands to warm lowlands, mirroring the latitudinal increase in species richness from cool to warm latitudes. However, since the more recent general acceptance of altitudinal gradients as model templates for testing hypotheses behind large-scale patterns of diversity, these gradients have been used in support of all the main diversity hypotheses, although little consensus has been achieved. Here we show that when resampling a data set comprising 400,000 records for 3,046 Pyrenean floristic species at different scales of analysis (achieved by varying grain size and the extent of the gradients sampled), the derived species richness pattern changed progressively from hump-shaped to a monotonic pattern as the scale of extent diminished. Scale effects alone gave rise to as many conflicting patterns of species richness as had previously been reported in the literature, and scale effects lent significantly different statistical support to competing diversity hypotheses. Effects of scale on current studies may be affected by human activities, because montane ecosystems and human activities are intimately connected. This interdependence has led to a global reduction in natural lowland habitats, hampering our ability to detect universal patterns and impeding the search for universal diversity gradients to discover the mechanisms determining the distribution of biological diversity on Earth.

U2 - 10.1038/nature06812

DO - 10.1038/nature06812

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 18464741

VL - 453

SP - 216

EP - 219

JO - Nature

JF - Nature

SN - 0028-0836

IS - 7192

ER -

ID: 8443956