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首页> 外文期刊>Evolutionary Biology >Spatial Dynamics of Body Size Frequency Distributions for North American Squamates
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Spatial Dynamics of Body Size Frequency Distributions for North American Squamates

机译:北美鳞状体的体频率分布的空间动力学

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Scale dependent patterns of body size frequency distributions (BSFDs) have been explained by competition and an evolutionarily optimal body size in mammals. We test these ideas in a vertebrate group that is a model for competition and evolutionary studies by assessing the scale-dependence of BSFDs. BSFDs (body size defined as maximum total length) of North American squamates were assembled for the entire continent, biomes within the continent and local habitat patches within biomes. We described these distributions using skewness, kurtosis, interquartile range (IQR), and an index of evenness. We compared these parameters among spatial scales using Kolmogorov–Smirnov tests and bootstrap simulations. We assessed the relationship between body size and species richness using correlations (Pearsons and Spearmans R). The North American BSFD is bimodal, with a primary mode (240 mm) corresponding to lizards and small snakes and a secondary mode (912 mm) to snakes. Squamate BSFDs varied in a scale dependent fashion for some biomes and local habitat patches for kurtosis (12% of local patches and 10% of biomes more platykurtic), skewness (30% of biomes skewed to the right) and IQR (12% of patches increased). The index of evenness of BSFDs did not vary with spatial scale. Body size of biomes and local habitat patches closely resembles the North American BSFD as species richness increases. We found limited statistical support for the scale-dependency of North American squamate BSFDs (only 12–30% of patches or biomes conformed to the predicted pattern). These results suggest that the mechanisms implicated in scale-dependent patterns of BSFDs for mammals, geographic turnover of modal-sized species and competition within local assemblages may be of diminished importance in squamates. As geographic turnover of modal-sized species is theoretically linked to an evolutionarily optimal body size, this may suggest that optimal size theory is not adequate to predict spatial scaling of BSFDs in squamates.
机译:哺乳动物的竞争和进化上最佳的体型已经解释了体型频率分布(BSFD)的与规模有关的模式。我们通过评估BSFD的规模依赖性,在脊椎动物群体中测试了这些想法,该脊椎动物群体是竞争和进化研究的模型。北美鳞茎的BSFD(体长定义为最大总长)在整个大陆,大陆内部的生物群落和生物群落内部的局部生境斑块中进行组装。我们使用偏度,峰度,四分位间距(IQR)和均匀度指数描述了这些分布。我们使用Kolmogorov–Smirnov检验和自举模拟在空间尺度之间比较了这些参数。我们使用相关性(Pearsons和Spearmans R)评估了体型与物种丰富度之间的关系。北美BSFD是双峰的,主要模式(240毫米)对应于蜥蜴和小蛇,次要模式(912毫米)对应于蛇。鳞状BSFD对于某些生物群落和峰顶的局部生境斑块(局部斑块的12%,桔梗的生物群落的10%),偏度(向右偏斜的生物群落的30%)和IQR(斑块的12%)以比例依赖的方式变化。增加)。 BSFD的均匀度指数不随空间尺度而变化。随着物种丰富度的提高,生物群落的体型和局部生境斑块与北美的BSFD非常相似。我们发现对北美鳞状BSFD的尺度依赖性的统计支持有限(只有12%到30%的斑块或生物群落符合预测模式)。这些结果表明,在哺乳动物中,与BSFDs的比例依赖性模式有关的机制,模态大小物种的地理转换和局部组合内的竞争可能在鳞状细胞中已减少。由于理论上模态大小物种的地理转换与进化上的最佳体型相关,这可能表明最佳大小理论不足以预测鳞茎中BSFD的空间尺度。

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