Société Linnéenne de LyonSciences naturelles · depuis 1822

Article du Bulletin

Spatial and temporal patterns of species diversity in montane mammal communities of western North America [Canevas spatial et temporel de la diversité spécifique des communautés de mammifères de l’Ouest Nord Américain].

Hadly Elizabeth A. & Maurer Brian A. · 2001 · Evolutionary Ecology Research, 3: 477-486.

Résumé

We present the results of the first analysis of distributional patterns of the same taxa across thousands of kilometres and thousands of years, which demonstrate that the exponents for the power relationships in space and time are similar. In both space and time, the distribution of mammalian taxa of the Great Basin and Rocky Mountains follows a nested subset pattern. We conclude that species identities and their relative abundances are non-random properties of communities that persist over long periods of ecological time and across geographic space. This is consistent with species abundance contributing heavily to evolutionary patterns, and allows predictions of how species within communities will respond to future global change.