A global analysis of avian island diversity–area relationships in the Anthropocene

Tom Matthews*, Joseph P. Wayman, Robert J. Whittaker, Pedro Cardoso, Julian P Hume, Ferran Sayol, Konstantinos Proios, Thomas E. Martin, Benjamin Baiser, Paulo A. V. Borges, Yasuhiro Kubota, Luiz dos Anjos, Joseph A. Tobias, Soares Filipa, Xingfeng Si, Ping Ding, Chase D. Mendenhall, Yong Chee Keita Sin, Frank E. Rheindt, Kostas A. TriantisFrançois Guilhaumon, Lluís Brotons, Corrado Battisti, Osanna Chu, François Rigal, David M Watson

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Research on island species–area relationships (ISAR) has expanded to incorporate functional (IFDAR) and phylogenetic (IPDAR) diversity. However, relative to the ISAR, we know little about IFDARs and IPDARs, and lack synthetic global analyses of variation in form of these three categories of island diversity–area relationship (IDAR). Here, we undertake the first comparative evaluation of IDARs at the global scale using 51 avian archipelagic datasets representing true and habitat islands. Using null models, we explore how richness-corrected functional and phylogenetic diversity scale with island area. We also provide the largest global assessment of the impacts of species introductions and extinctions on the IDAR. Results show that increasing richness with area is the primary driver of the (non-richness corrected) IPDAR and IFDAR for many datasets. However, for several archipelagos, richness-corrected functional and phylogenetic diversity changes linearly with island area, suggesting that the dominant community assembly processes shift along the island area gradient. We also find that archipelagos with the steepest ISARs exhibit the biggest differences in slope between IDARs, indicating increased functional and phylogenetic redundancy on larger islands in these archipelagos. In several cases introduced species seem to have ‘re-calibrated’ the IDARs such that they resemble the historic period prior to recent extinctions.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)965-982
Number of pages18
JournalEcology Letters
Volume26
Issue number6
Early online date29 Mar 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 May 2023

Bibliographical note

Acknowledgments:
The comments of Anderson Saldanha Bueno, Jonathan Chase and three anonymous reviewers greatly improved the paper. The computations described in this paper were performed using the University of Birmingham's BlueBEAR HPC service, and the data compilation was supported by the University's GEES Research Support Fund. FS was supported by a Beatriu de Pinós postdoctoral fellowship (2020 BP 00067) from the Ministry of Research and Universities of the Government of Catalonia.

Keywords

  • birds
  • community assembly
  • diversity–area relationship
  • functional diversity
  • habitat fragments
  • islands
  • phylogenetic diversity
  • species–area relationship
  • SYNTHESIS

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