Predictions and tests of climate‐based hypotheses of broad‐scale variation in taxonomic richness
University of Ottawa · Michigan State University · +11 more institutions
Abstract
Abstract Broad‐scale variation in taxonomic richness is strongly correlated with climate. Many mechanisms have been hypothesized to explain these patterns; however, testable predictions that would distinguish among them have rarely been derived. Here, we examine several prominent hypotheses for climate–richness relationships, deriving and testing predictions based on their hypothesized mechanisms. The ‘energy–richness hypothesis’ (also called the ‘more individuals hypothesis’) postulates that more productive areas have more individuals and therefore more species. More productive areas do often have more species, but extant data are not consistent with the expected causal relationship from energy to numbers of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 53.16
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 91
Authors
11- DJDavid J. CurrieCorresponding
University of Ottawa
- GGGary G. Mittelbach
Michigan State University
- HVHoward V. Cornell
University of Delaware
- RFRichard Field
University of Nottingham
- JGJean‐François Guégan
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Agropolis International, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
Topics & keywords
- Species richness
- Ecology
- Body size and species richness
- Genetic algorithm
- Biology
- Diversification (marketing strategy)
- Extant taxon
- Evolutionary biology
- Climate action