Do Global Diversity Patterns of Vertebrates Reflect Those of Monocots? e56979

Few studies of global diversity gradients in plants exist, largely because the data are not available for all species involved. Instead, most global studies have focussed on vertebrates, as these taxa have historically been associated with the most complete data. Here, we address this shortfall by f...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2013-05, Vol.8 (5)
Hauptverfasser: McInnes, Lynsey, Jones, F Andrew, Orme, C DavidL, Sobkowiak, Benjamin, Barraclough, Timothy G, Chase, Mark W, Govaerts, Rafaeel, Soltis, Douglas E, Soltis, Pamela S, Savolainen, Vincent
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Few studies of global diversity gradients in plants exist, largely because the data are not available for all species involved. Instead, most global studies have focussed on vertebrates, as these taxa have historically been associated with the most complete data. Here, we address this shortfall by first investigating global diversity gradients in monocots, a morphologically and functionally diverse clade representing a quarter of flowering plant diversity, and then assessing congruence between monocot and vertebrate diversity patterns. To do this, we create a new dataset that merges biome-level associations for all monocot genera with country-level associations for almost all ~70,000 species. We then assess the evidence for direct versus indirect effects of this plant diversity on vertebrate diversity using a combination of linear regression and structural equation modelling (SEM). Finally, we also calculate overlap of diversity hotspots for monocots and each vertebrate taxon. Monocots follow a latitudinal gradient although with pockets of extra-tropical diversity, mirroring patterns in vertebrates. Monocot diversity is positively associated with vertebrate diversity, but the strength of correlation varies depending on the clades being compared. Monocot diversity explains marginal amounts of variance (
ISSN:1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0056979