6 research outputs found
Environmental Predictors of Diversity in Recent Planktonic Foraminifera as Recorded in Marine Sediments
© 2016 Fenton et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. [4.0 license]. The attached file is the published version of the article
Global monocot diversification: geography better explains variation in species richness than environment or biology
Monocots account for a quarter of angiosperm species richness and are among the most economically and culturally important plants, including cereals (grasses), palms, orchids and lilies. Previous investigations of correlates of monocot species diversity have varied in scale and usually concentrated on a few drivers of diversification. Here, to disentangle the correlates of monocot diversity, we reconstructed a genus-level phylogenetic tree (1987 of the 2713 genera) and compiled an extensive database of abiotic, biotic and geographical characteristics to assess whether differences in these traits correlate with the vast asymmetrical species richness among genera present in this clade. Our results support several classical biodiversity theories, including species–area relationships, and latitudinal and elevational diversity gradients. Furthermore, interactions among these factors explain an additional 10% of the variation (compared to 36% from the main effects alone). We conclude that higher species richness among monocot genera is associated with geographical variables, especially larger ranges and lower elevations, rather than physical environment or physiology
Geolocators reveal migration and pre-breeding behaviour of the critically endangered Balearic Shearwater Puffinus mauretanicus
Using combined miniature archival light and salt-water immersion loggers, we characterise the year-round individual at-sea
movements of Europe’s only critically endangered seabird, the Balearic shearwater Puffinus mauretanicus, for the first time.
Focusing on the non-breeding period, we show that all of the 26 breeding birds tracked from their breeding site on
Mallorca in the Mediterranean Sea successfully made a 2–4 month migration into the Atlantic Ocean, where they utilised
well-defined core areas off Portuguese and French coasts. As well as identifying high-risk areas in the Atlantic, our results
confirm that breeding birds spend most of the year concentrated around productive waters of the Iberian shelf in the
western Mediterranean. Migration phenology appeared largely unrelated to the subsequent (distinctly synchronous)
breeding attempt, suggesting that any carry-over effects were compensated for during a long pre-laying period spent over
winter in the Mediterranean. Using the light and salt-water immersion data alone we were also able to characterise the
pattern of pre-laying visits to the colony in considerable detail, demonstrating that breeding pairs appear to coordinate
their over-day visits using a high frequency of night-time visits throughout the winter. Our study shows that geolocation
technology is a valuable tool for assessing the spatial distribution of risks to this critically endangered species, and also
provides a low-impact method for remotely observing the detailed behaviour of seabird species that may be sensitive to
disturbance from traditional study methods