Is rich and rare the common share? Describing biodiversity patterns to inform conservation practices for South American anurans.

Species richness and range size are key features of biogeographic and macroecological analyses, which can yield a first assessment tool to define conservation priorities. Here we combined both features in a simultaneous analysis, based on range-diversity plots, to identify sets of rich-rare (high sp...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fabricio Villalobos, Ricardo Dobrovolski, Diogo B Provete, Sidney F Gouveia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3567056?pdf=render
id doaj-7cc9d2a4ee204b34a1f1aa470b6b2160
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7cc9d2a4ee204b34a1f1aa470b6b21602020-11-25T01:22:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0182e5607310.1371/journal.pone.0056073Is rich and rare the common share? Describing biodiversity patterns to inform conservation practices for South American anurans.Fabricio VillalobosRicardo DobrovolskiDiogo B ProveteSidney F GouveiaSpecies richness and range size are key features of biogeographic and macroecological analyses, which can yield a first assessment tool to define conservation priorities. Here we combined both features in a simultaneous analysis, based on range-diversity plots, to identify sets of rich-rare (high species richness with restricted ranges) and poor-rare cells (low species richness with restricted ranges). We applied this analysis to the anurans of South America and evaluated the representation of those sets of cells within the protected area system. South American anurans showed high species richness in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest and East Tropical Andes, while regions harboring most of the rare species were concentrated in the Andes and Atlantic Coast from North-Eastern Brazil to River Plate. Based on such patterns, we identified as rich-rare cells the Brazilian Atlantic Forest and Tropical Andes and as poor-rare cells the southern part of Andes and Uruguay. A low fraction of both sets of cells was represented within the protected area system. We show that a simultaneous consideration of species richness and rarity provides a rapid assessment of large-scale biodiversity patterns and may contribute to the definition of conservation priorities.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3567056?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fabricio Villalobos
Ricardo Dobrovolski
Diogo B Provete
Sidney F Gouveia
spellingShingle Fabricio Villalobos
Ricardo Dobrovolski
Diogo B Provete
Sidney F Gouveia
Is rich and rare the common share? Describing biodiversity patterns to inform conservation practices for South American anurans.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Fabricio Villalobos
Ricardo Dobrovolski
Diogo B Provete
Sidney F Gouveia
author_sort Fabricio Villalobos
title Is rich and rare the common share? Describing biodiversity patterns to inform conservation practices for South American anurans.
title_short Is rich and rare the common share? Describing biodiversity patterns to inform conservation practices for South American anurans.
title_full Is rich and rare the common share? Describing biodiversity patterns to inform conservation practices for South American anurans.
title_fullStr Is rich and rare the common share? Describing biodiversity patterns to inform conservation practices for South American anurans.
title_full_unstemmed Is rich and rare the common share? Describing biodiversity patterns to inform conservation practices for South American anurans.
title_sort is rich and rare the common share? describing biodiversity patterns to inform conservation practices for south american anurans.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Species richness and range size are key features of biogeographic and macroecological analyses, which can yield a first assessment tool to define conservation priorities. Here we combined both features in a simultaneous analysis, based on range-diversity plots, to identify sets of rich-rare (high species richness with restricted ranges) and poor-rare cells (low species richness with restricted ranges). We applied this analysis to the anurans of South America and evaluated the representation of those sets of cells within the protected area system. South American anurans showed high species richness in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest and East Tropical Andes, while regions harboring most of the rare species were concentrated in the Andes and Atlantic Coast from North-Eastern Brazil to River Plate. Based on such patterns, we identified as rich-rare cells the Brazilian Atlantic Forest and Tropical Andes and as poor-rare cells the southern part of Andes and Uruguay. A low fraction of both sets of cells was represented within the protected area system. We show that a simultaneous consideration of species richness and rarity provides a rapid assessment of large-scale biodiversity patterns and may contribute to the definition of conservation priorities.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3567056?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT fabriciovillalobos isrichandrarethecommonsharedescribingbiodiversitypatternstoinformconservationpracticesforsouthamericananurans
AT ricardodobrovolski isrichandrarethecommonsharedescribingbiodiversitypatternstoinformconservationpracticesforsouthamericananurans
AT diogobprovete isrichandrarethecommonsharedescribingbiodiversitypatternstoinformconservationpracticesforsouthamericananurans
AT sidneyfgouveia isrichandrarethecommonsharedescribingbiodiversitypatternstoinformconservationpracticesforsouthamericananurans
_version_ 1725125775462498304