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Spatial congruence of ecological transition at the regional scale in South Africa
Author(s) -
Van Rensburg Berndt J.,
Koleff Patricia,
Gaston Kevin J.,
Chown Steven L.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of biogeography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1365-2699
pISSN - 0305-0270
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2699.2003.00996.x
Subject(s) - biome , geography , spatial heterogeneity , ecology , spatial ecology , vegetation (pathology) , physical geography , biology , ecosystem , medicine , pathology
Aim  To determine whether patterns of avian species turnover reflect either biome or climate transitions at a regional scale, and whether anthropogenic landscape transformation affects those patterns. Location South Africa and Lesotho. Methods  Biome and land transformation data were used to identify sets of transition areas, and avian species occurrence data were used to measure species turnover rates ( β ‐diversity). Spatial congruence between areas of biome transition, areas of high vegetation heterogeneity, high climatic heterogeneity, and high β ‐diversity was assessed using random draw techniques. Spatial overlap in anthropogenically transformed areas, areas of high climatic heterogeneity and high β ‐diversity areas was also assessed. Results  Biome transition areas had greater vegetation heterogeneity, climatic heterogeneity, and β ‐diversity than expected by chance. For the land transformation transition areas, this was only true for land transformation heterogeneity values and for one of the β ‐diversity measures. Avian presence/absence data clearly separated the biome types but not the land transformation types. Main conclusions  Biome edges have elevated climatic and vegetation heterogeneity. More importantly, elevated β ‐diversity in the avifauna is clearly reflected in the heterogeneous biome transition areas. Thus, there is spatial congruence in biome transition areas (identified on vegetation and climatic grounds) and avian turnover patterns. However, there is no congruence between avian turnover and land transformation transition areas. This suggests that biogeographical patterns can be recovered using modern data despite landscape transformation.

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