Rethinking patch size and isolation effects: the habitat amount hypothesis
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Abstract
Abstract I challenge (1) the assumption that habitat patches are natural units of measurement for species richness, and (2) the assumption of distinct effects of habitat patch size and isolation on species richness. I propose a simpler view of the relationship between habitat distribution and species richness, the ‘habitat amount hypothesis’, and I suggest ways of testing it. The habitat amount hypothesis posits that, for habitat patches in a matrix of non‐habitat, the patch size effect and the patch isolation effect are driven mainly by a single underlying process, the sample area effect. The hypothesis predicts that species richness in equal‐sized sample sites should increase with the total amount of habitat…
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Species richness
- Habitat
- Ecology
- Spatial heterogeneity
- Insular biogeography
- Geography
- Biology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Life in Land
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