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Climate and species richness patterns of freshwater fish in North America and Europe
Author(s) -
Griffiths David,
McGonigle Chris,
Quinn Rory
Publication year - 2014
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 - 10.1111/jbi.12216
Subject(s) - species richness , generalist and specialist species , ecology , range (aeronautics) , habitat , geography , spatial ecology , climate change , freshwater fish , macroecology , body size and species richness , physical geography , environmental science , biology , fish <actinopterygii> , fishery , materials science , composite material
Aim To investigate the effect of climatic, historical and spatial variables on species richness patterns in freshwater fish. Location N orth A merica and E urope. Methods Regional species lists were used to document the spatial richness patterns. Three realms, E urope and P acific and A tlantic N orth A merica, were identified. The numbers of species, by habitat, migration and distributional range categories, were calculated and the contributions of regional mean and seasonal temperature and rainfall, historical (realm, glaciation), and spatial (area, elevational range) variables to predicting richness were assessed using boosted regression trees, model‐averaging and spatially explicit models. Results The latitudinal temperature gradient is stronger than that for rainfall in the A tlantic realm whereas the rainfall gradient in E urope is independent of the temperature gradient. Species richness is more strongly correlated with temperature than rainfall, and the effects are stronger in the A tlantic realm than in E urope. The influence of environmental variables differs between habitat specialist and generalist species. Climate, particularly maximum monthly temperature, is the best predictor of richness in rivers whereas climate variables are less important than historical/spatial variables for diadromous species. Main conclusions Freshwater fish richness differences between realms follow differences in spatial climatic trends. The contributions of climatic, historical and spatial predictor variables vary with ecology: temperature is a better predictor than rainfall in river‐dwellers. The richness gradient is driven more by physiological than by energetic constraints on species. The importance of history is probably underestimated because of correlations with climate variables.

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