Publication:
Elevational patterns of species richness and endemism for some important taxa in the Hengduan Mountains, southwestern China

Thumbnail Image

Date

2008

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Science + Business Media
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Zhang, Da-Cai, Yong-Hong Zhang, David E. Boufford, and Hang Sun. 2008. “Elevational Patterns of Species Richness and Endemism for Some Important Taxa in the Hengduan Mountains, Southwestern China.” Biodivers Conserv 18 (3) (December 13): 699–716. doi:10.1007/s10531-008-9534-x.

Research Data

Abstract

We describe the elevational patterns of species richness and endemism of some important taxa in the Hengduan Mountains, southwest China. Species richness data came from publications, an online database, herbaria and Weld work. Species richness was estimated by rarefaction and interpolation. The Hengduan Mountains region was divided into a southern and northern subregion, and all species were assigned to four groups based on their distributional range within this region. The conditional autoregressive model (CAR) was used to relate species richness and explanatory variables. The elevational patterns of total, endemic and non-endemic species richness, at subregion and entire region scales, presented to be unimodal and peaked at similar elevations. Area size was strongly related with species richness, and was more powerful in explaining variation in species richness in the northern subregion than in the southern subregion. A single climatic variable (mean annual rainfall, potential evapotranspiration or moisture index) showed a weak relationship with the elevational pattern of species richness. Area and climatic variables together explained more than 67% of the variation in non-endemic richness, 53% in total richness, and 50% in endemic richness. There were three patterns of endemism at the generic level with increasing elevation: namely endemism increased, decreased, or peaked at middle elevations. All selected taxa have experienced rapid speciation and evolution within this region, which plays an important role in the uniform elevational patterns of total, endemic and nonendemic richness, and in the multiform elevational patterns of endemism.

Description

Keywords

Area, Basal taxa, Climatic variables, Dispersal of species, Endemic species, Unimodal pattern

Terms of Use

Metadata Only

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories