A multi-scale study of Orthoptera species richness and human population size controlling for sampling effort

被引:10
|
作者
Cantarello, Elena [2 ]
Steck, Claude E. [3 ]
Fontana, Paolo [4 ]
Fontaneto, Diego [5 ]
Marini, Lorenzo [4 ]
Pautasso, Marco [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol & Med, Div Biol, Ascot SL5 7PY, Berks, England
[2] Bournemouth Univ, Sch Conservat Sci, Poole BH12 5BB, Dorset, England
[3] Fed Res Inst WSL, Sect Nat Conservat & Hist Ecol, Dept Landscape, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland
[4] Univ Padua, Dept Environm Agron & Crop Prod, I-35020 Padua, Italy
[5] Swedish Museum Nat Hist, Dept Invertebrate Zool, S-10405 Stockholm, Sweden
关键词
Biogeography; Crickets; Grasshoppers; Invertebrates; Macroecology; Scale dependence; CONSERVATION CONFLICTS; GRASSHOPPER DIVERSITY; PEOPLE CORRELATION; RELATIVE INFLUENCE; SCALE-DEPENDENCE; PROTECTED AREAS; LAND-USE; BIODIVERSITY; PLANT; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.1007/s00114-009-0636-4
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Recent large-scale studies have shown that biodiversity-rich regions also tend to be densely populated areas. The most obvious explanation is that biodiversity and human beings tend to match the distribution of energy availability, environmental stability and/or habitat heterogeneity. However, the species-people correlation can also be an artefact, as more populated regions could show more species because of a more thorough sampling. Few studies have tested this sampling bias hypothesis. Using a newly collated dataset, we studied whether Orthoptera species richness is related to human population size in Italy's regions (average area 15,000 km(2)) and provinces (2,900 km(2)). As expected, the observed number of species increases significantly with increasing human population size for both grain sizes, although the proportion of variance explained is minimal at the provincial level. However, variations in observed Orthoptera species richness are primarily associated with the available number of records, which is in turn well correlated with human population size (at least at the regional level). Estimated Orthoptera species richness (Chao2 and Jackknife) also increases with human population size both for regions and provinces. Both for regions and provinces, this increase is not significant when controlling for variation in area and number of records. Our study confirms the hypothesis that broad-scale human population-biodiversity correlations can in some cases be artefactual. More systematic sampling of less studied taxa such as invertebrates is necessary to ascertain whether biogeographical patterns persist when sampling effort is kept constant or included in models.
引用
收藏
页码:265 / 271
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A multi-scale study of Orthoptera species richness and human population size controlling for sampling effort
    Elena Cantarello
    Claude E. Steck
    Paolo Fontana
    Diego Fontaneto
    Lorenzo Marini
    Marco Pautasso
    [J]. Naturwissenschaften, 2010, 97 : 265 - 271
  • [2] Energy, species richness, and human population size: Conservation implications at a national scale
    Chown, SL
    van Rensburg, BJ
    Gaston, KJ
    Rodrigues, ASL
    van Jaarsveld, AS
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2003, 13 (05) : 1233 - 1241
  • [3] Using multi-scale sampling and spatial cross-correlation to investigate patterns of plant species richness
    Kalkhan, MA
    Stohlgren, TJ
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT, 2000, 64 (03) : 591 - 605
  • [4] Using Multi-Scale Sampling and Spatial Cross-Correlation to Investigate Patterns of Plant Species Richness
    Mohammed A. Kalkhan
    Thomas J. Stohlgren
    [J]. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 2000, 64 : 591 - 605
  • [5] Multi-scale analysis of plant species richness in Serengeti grasslands
    Anderson, T. Michael
    Metzger, Kristine L.
    McNaughton, Samuel J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2007, 34 (02) : 313 - 323
  • [6] Multi-scale environmental heterogeneity as a predictor of plant species richness
    Jennifer K. Costanza
    Aaron Moody
    Robert K. Peet
    [J]. Landscape Ecology, 2011, 26 : 851 - 864
  • [7] Multi-scale environmental heterogeneity as a predictor of plant species richness
    Costanza, Jennifer K.
    Moody, Aaron
    Peet, Robert K.
    [J]. LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2011, 26 (06) : 851 - 864
  • [8] Sampling effort and species richness assessment: a case study on Brazilian spiders
    Oliveira, Ubirajara
    Brescovit, Antonio D.
    Santos, Adalberto J.
    [J]. BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2017, 26 (06) : 1481 - 1493
  • [9] Sampling effort and species richness assessment: a case study on Brazilian spiders
    Ubirajara Oliveira
    Antonio D. Brescovit
    Adalberto J. Santos
    [J]. Biodiversity and Conservation, 2017, 26 : 1481 - 1493
  • [10] A flexible multi-scale approach for standardised recording of plant species richness patterns
    Dengler, Juergen
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2009, 9 (06) : 1169 - 1178