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Distribution patterns of reptiles and amphibians in Puerto Rico
This study examined the question of whether a big island can be divided into many smaller
islands with the same pattern of area-species curve as that of the complete island. To address
this question, this study used data on the number and distribution of amphibians and
reptiles on Puerto Rico and landbridge islands of the Puerto Rican Bank, which were fragmented
from the big island about 10,000 years ago. In Puerto Rico, the data show correlations
between the number of species and area available at different elevation levels and
between species and area after removing effects of elevation. These patterns are different
from the patterns of correlation between area and the number of reptiles and amphibians on
29 islands on the Puerto Rican Bank. The area-species curves of the elevationally and areally
subdivided "islands" on Puerto Rico tend to have steeper slopes than the curves of the Puerto Rican Bank islands. Analyses of area and the number of those species on fragmented
habitat islands at different elevations also indicated correlation between them. However,
patterns of correlation seem not to be the same at each altitude. The slope of the area-species
curve seems to decrease with increasing elevation levels. Other patterns of species distribution
of Puerto Rico's herpetofauna are: there are linear relationships between the
number of species and elevation, the number of species and distance from the coast, and
the number of species and the species range areas. Multiple regression analyses of three
variables: area, precipitation, and elevation, suggested that variation of species distribution
in Puerto Rico is partly caused by interactions among these variables. Elevation plays an
especially important role in explaining reptile and amphibian distribution. The rainfall variable
had the least effect on determining herpetofauna diversity. The study results suggest
that area-species correlation is a consequence of habitat heterogeneity on the island
Hebius paraphyly.
7 pages : 1 illustration ; 26 cm.We investigate the phylogenetic relationships of two poorly known Natricinae, Parahelicops and Pararhabdophis, for which we obtained nucleotide sequence data from one mitochondrial gene (cytochrome b) and three nuclear genes (CMOS, NT3, and RAG1). Maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and combined and partitioned Bayesian analyses suggest that both Parahelicops and Pararhabdophis are embedded within the genus Hebius. To align classification with phylogeny, we synonymize Parahelicops and Pararhabdophis with Hebius