Unequal Contribution of Widespread and Narrow-Ranged Species to Botanical Diversity Patterns.

In conservation studies, solely widespread species are often used as indicators of diversity patterns, but narrow-ranged species can show different patterns. Here, we assess how well subsets of narrow-ranged, widespread or randomly selected plant species represent patterns of species richness and we...

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Main Authors: André S J van Proosdij, Niels Raes, Jan J Wieringa, Marc S M Sosef
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5199077?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-70000192723346328542f500c1d67d7a2020-11-25T00:07:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-011112e016920010.1371/journal.pone.0169200Unequal Contribution of Widespread and Narrow-Ranged Species to Botanical Diversity Patterns.André S J van ProosdijNiels RaesJan J WieringaMarc S M SosefIn conservation studies, solely widespread species are often used as indicators of diversity patterns, but narrow-ranged species can show different patterns. Here, we assess how well subsets of narrow-ranged, widespread or randomly selected plant species represent patterns of species richness and weighted endemism in Gabon, tropical Africa. Specifically, we assess the effect of using different definitions of widespread and narrow-ranged and of the information content of the subsets. Finally, we test if narrow-ranged species are overrepresented in species-rich areas. Based on distribution models of Gabonese plant species, we defined sequential subsets from narrow-ranged-to-widespread, widespread-to-narrow-ranged, and 100 randomly arranged species sequences using the range sizes of species in tropical Africa and within Gabon. Along these sequences, correlations between subsets and the total species richness and total weighted endemism patterns were computed. Random species subsets best represent the total species richness pattern, whereas subsets of narrow-ranged species best represent the total weighted endemism pattern. For species ordered according to their range sizes in tropical Africa, subsets of narrow-ranged species represented the total species richness pattern better than widespread species subsets did. However, the opposite was true when range sizes were truncated by the Gabonese national country borders. Correcting for the information content of the subset results in a skew of the sequential correlations, its direction depending on the range-size frequency distribution. Finally, we find a strong, positive, non-linear relation between weighted endemism and total species richness. Observed differences in the contribution of narrow-ranged, widespread and randomly selected species to species richness and weighted endemism patterns can be explained by the range-size frequency distribution and the use of different definitions of widespread or narrow-ranged. We call for a reconsideration of the use of widespread species as an indicator of diversity patterns, and advocate using the full ranges of species when assessing diversity patterns.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5199077?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author André S J van Proosdij
Niels Raes
Jan J Wieringa
Marc S M Sosef
spellingShingle André S J van Proosdij
Niels Raes
Jan J Wieringa
Marc S M Sosef
Unequal Contribution of Widespread and Narrow-Ranged Species to Botanical Diversity Patterns.
PLoS ONE
author_facet André S J van Proosdij
Niels Raes
Jan J Wieringa
Marc S M Sosef
author_sort André S J van Proosdij
title Unequal Contribution of Widespread and Narrow-Ranged Species to Botanical Diversity Patterns.
title_short Unequal Contribution of Widespread and Narrow-Ranged Species to Botanical Diversity Patterns.
title_full Unequal Contribution of Widespread and Narrow-Ranged Species to Botanical Diversity Patterns.
title_fullStr Unequal Contribution of Widespread and Narrow-Ranged Species to Botanical Diversity Patterns.
title_full_unstemmed Unequal Contribution of Widespread and Narrow-Ranged Species to Botanical Diversity Patterns.
title_sort unequal contribution of widespread and narrow-ranged species to botanical diversity patterns.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description In conservation studies, solely widespread species are often used as indicators of diversity patterns, but narrow-ranged species can show different patterns. Here, we assess how well subsets of narrow-ranged, widespread or randomly selected plant species represent patterns of species richness and weighted endemism in Gabon, tropical Africa. Specifically, we assess the effect of using different definitions of widespread and narrow-ranged and of the information content of the subsets. Finally, we test if narrow-ranged species are overrepresented in species-rich areas. Based on distribution models of Gabonese plant species, we defined sequential subsets from narrow-ranged-to-widespread, widespread-to-narrow-ranged, and 100 randomly arranged species sequences using the range sizes of species in tropical Africa and within Gabon. Along these sequences, correlations between subsets and the total species richness and total weighted endemism patterns were computed. Random species subsets best represent the total species richness pattern, whereas subsets of narrow-ranged species best represent the total weighted endemism pattern. For species ordered according to their range sizes in tropical Africa, subsets of narrow-ranged species represented the total species richness pattern better than widespread species subsets did. However, the opposite was true when range sizes were truncated by the Gabonese national country borders. Correcting for the information content of the subset results in a skew of the sequential correlations, its direction depending on the range-size frequency distribution. Finally, we find a strong, positive, non-linear relation between weighted endemism and total species richness. Observed differences in the contribution of narrow-ranged, widespread and randomly selected species to species richness and weighted endemism patterns can be explained by the range-size frequency distribution and the use of different definitions of widespread or narrow-ranged. We call for a reconsideration of the use of widespread species as an indicator of diversity patterns, and advocate using the full ranges of species when assessing diversity patterns.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5199077?pdf=render
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