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Global patterns of connectivity and isolation of populations of forest bird species in the late P leistocene
Author(s) -
Peterson A. Townsend,
Ammann Caspar M.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
global ecology and biogeography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.164
H-Index - 152
eISSN - 1466-8238
pISSN - 1466-822X
DOI - 10.1111/geb.12010
Subject(s) - biome , ecology , fragmentation (computing) , ecological niche , biology , niche , population , geography , environmental niche modelling , habitat , ecosystem , demography , sociology
Aim Species’ distributional responses to cool periods in the P leistocene appear to have been diverse, but patterns of response are poorly known globally, and the nature of distributional responses to interglacial conditions remains largely unknown. The aim of this contribution is to assess distributional responses of forest bird species to L ast I nterglacial ( LIG ) and L ast G lacial M aximum ( LGM ) conditions within nine forest regions world‐wide, to test whether different regions experienced consistently different types of distributional responses. Location Global. Methods We use ecological niche modelling approaches under an assumption of ecological niche conservatism to assess degrees of fragmentation of species distributions through the LIG–LGM –present transitions. Models trained under present‐day conditions were transferred to P leistocene conditions, and fragmentation of potential distributional areas was assessed using F rag S tats. Results Our results showed four regions to have greater fragmentation at LGM than at LIG or at present; three showed greater connectivity at LGM ; and two were equivocal. Main conclusions Our results suggest that the world is a patchwork of regions in which forest species experienced either consistently greater or consistently lesser population subdivision during the alternating cool and warm periods that characterized the P leistocene. Speciation timing and dynamics should differ dramatically among major regions and biomes if these periods of connection and disjunction translate into speciation opportunity.

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