Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 7-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Patterns of distribution, diversity and endemism in Afrotropical birds

Patterns of distribution, diversity and endemism in Afrotropical birds Patterns of distribution, diversity and endemism for 1595 species and well‐marked subspecies of Afrotropical (excluding marine islands) passerine and non‐aquatic non‐passerine birds are identified and analysed using uni‐ and multi‐variate statistical methods. Patterns of distribution are well predicted by a hierarchical model of African avifaunal zones based on patterns of distribution and evolution in guineafowl (Family Numididae). The boundaries of avifaunal zones recognized here for passerines and non‐passerines are similar to one another, and largely parallel those of broad contemporary vegetation types along a rainfall gradient. However, there are interesting discrepancies between the distributions of contemporary vegetation types and inferred avifaunal zones, most notably the disjunct similarity of the avifaunas of three sections of lowland forest, much of which presently is an apparently continuous belt. We interpret this disjunct avifaunal similarity in the light of palaeoecological and geomorphological data as evidence in favour of the hypothesis of forest refugia. This hypothesis states that presently continuous forests were fragmented during arid conditions in the geological past, and that birds which prefer forested biotopes were confined to “island” forest refugia. Patterns of diversity and endemism, when considered together with patterns of distribution, also support the refugium hypothesis, and suggest the existence of two additional refugia, one in the western African forest, the other in the eastern African equatorial savanna. Several of these refugia may have been important centres of evolution for forest and open country birds. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Zoology Wiley

Patterns of distribution, diversity and endemism in Afrotropical birds

Journal of Zoology , Volume 198 (4) – Dec 1, 1982

Loading next page...
 
/lp/wiley/patterns-of-distribution-diversity-and-endemism-in-afrotropical-birds-4UTHuV4wbY

References (11)

Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
© The Zoological Society of London
ISSN
0952-8369
eISSN
1469-7998
DOI
10.1111/jzo.1982.198.4.417
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Patterns of distribution, diversity and endemism for 1595 species and well‐marked subspecies of Afrotropical (excluding marine islands) passerine and non‐aquatic non‐passerine birds are identified and analysed using uni‐ and multi‐variate statistical methods. Patterns of distribution are well predicted by a hierarchical model of African avifaunal zones based on patterns of distribution and evolution in guineafowl (Family Numididae). The boundaries of avifaunal zones recognized here for passerines and non‐passerines are similar to one another, and largely parallel those of broad contemporary vegetation types along a rainfall gradient. However, there are interesting discrepancies between the distributions of contemporary vegetation types and inferred avifaunal zones, most notably the disjunct similarity of the avifaunas of three sections of lowland forest, much of which presently is an apparently continuous belt. We interpret this disjunct avifaunal similarity in the light of palaeoecological and geomorphological data as evidence in favour of the hypothesis of forest refugia. This hypothesis states that presently continuous forests were fragmented during arid conditions in the geological past, and that birds which prefer forested biotopes were confined to “island” forest refugia. Patterns of diversity and endemism, when considered together with patterns of distribution, also support the refugium hypothesis, and suggest the existence of two additional refugia, one in the western African forest, the other in the eastern African equatorial savanna. Several of these refugia may have been important centres of evolution for forest and open country birds.

Journal

Journal of ZoologyWiley

Published: Dec 1, 1982

There are no references for this article.