Which Terrestrial Class Of Animals Has The Highest Species Richness
journal article
Conservation Biology
, pp. 937-944 (eight pages)
Published By: Wiley
https://www. jstor .org/stable/4620907
Important questions in conservation biology and ecology include whether species diversities of different groups of organisms are correlated and, in particular whether found multifariousness influences animal diversity. I used correlation and partial regression analyses to examine the relationships betwixt species richness of vascular plants and four major groups of terrestrial vertebrates (mammals, amphibians, reptiles, and birds) in 28 provinces in China. Species richness data were obtained from the literature. Environmental variables included normalized difference vegetation index, mean January temperature, mean annual temperature, annual precipitation, May through August atmospheric precipitation, actual evapotranspiration, potential evapotranspiration, and elevation range. Species richness was strongly and positively correlated among the five groups of organisms. Constitute richness was correlated with animal richness more than strongly than the richness of dissimilar animal groups correlated with each other except for reptile richness, which had a slightly higher correlation with amphibian richness than with plant richness. Plant richness uniquely explained 41 times more variance in the species richness of the iv vertebrate groups combined than environmental variables uniquely did, suggesting that constitute richness influences terrestrial vertebrate richness at the regional calibration examined. Because of strong correlations between the diversity of vascular plants and vertebrates, the diverseness of vascular plants may be used as a surrogate for the diversity of terrestrial animals in China. My results have implications for selection of areas to exist protected at both regional and local scales.
In the past decade Conservation Biology has get the about influential and often cited journal in its field. Nature calls this title "required reading for ecologists throughout the earth." The periodical continues to publish groundbreaking papers and remains instrumental in defining the key bug contributing to the written report and preservation of species and habitats. The Society for Conservation Biology and its members appreciate the increasing and alarming rate of species and habitat loss in our earth and remain committed to the movement of conservation biology to the forefront of the sciences. Only by agreement the scientific footing of conservation can we effectively confront the extinction crisis. JSTOR provides a digital archive of the print version of Conservation Biology. The electronic version of Conservation Biological science is available at http://world wide web.interscience.wiley.com. Authorized users may be able to access the full text articles at this site.
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Conservation Biology © 2007 Wiley
Source: https://www.jstor.org/stable/4620907
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