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Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range
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Page 1: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Fundamental Unit of Biogeography

Geographic Range

Page 2: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Conveying Range – Outline Maps

Range of Sooty Butterfly (Zegris eupheme)

Page 3: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Conveying Range – Outline Maps

Range of Racoon (Procyon lotor)

Page 4: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Conveying Range – Outline Maps

Range of Three-ridge Mussel (Amblema plicata)

Page 5: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Conveying Range – Outline Maps

Bird Map

Page 6: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Conveying Range – Dot Maps

Locations for emerald shiner (Notropis atherinoides)

Page 7: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Conveying Range – Dot Maps

Locations for brown trout (Salmo trutta) – dot and outline map

Page 8: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Conveying Range – Dot Maps

Blue jay distribution in 20th precentile contours

Page 9: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Conveying Range – Contour Maps

Blue jay distribution as relative abundance

Page 10: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Limitations

• Outline – not across entire range (clumped disperson)

• Dots – inaccuracies of locale information

• Contour – spotty data

• BUT– Georeferencing– Geostatistics– GIS – integration of data

Page 11: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Patchy Nature of Range - Spatially

Page 12: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Patchy Nature of Range - Temporal

Page 13: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Factors Affecting Distribution of Species

• Limiting abiotic factors (range of tolerance)

• Biotic interactions

• Hutchisonian niche – n-dimensional hypervolume

Page 14: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.
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Niche Dimensions and Range

• Fundamental niche

• Realized niche

• Fundamental geographic range

• Realized geographic range

Page 18: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Distribution of the barnacle Chthamalus stellatus (Connel 1961)

Page 19: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Gaps in Distribution

• Metapopulations– Sink and source subpopulations– Atlantic snail

• Barriers

Page 20: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.
Page 21: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Other Source and Sink Distributions

• Migration – temporal and resource-driven

• Irruptions

Page 22: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.
Page 23: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Red locust (Nomadacris septemfasciata) – source (black) and sink (gray) range

Page 24: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Of Note

• Any fluctuations of population size will influence the realized geographic range

Page 25: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

All winter at high latitude – will extend range with resource shortage

Page 26: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Variation over Range

Page 27: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.
Page 28: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Abiotic Limiting Factors

• Range of tolerance

• Fundamental niche

• Overlapping effects

• Trade-offs for tolerance of given factor

Page 29: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Disturbance

• Limit/expand range of species

• Patch dynamics

• Intermediate disturbance hypothesis

• Bluff and Great Lakes Examples

Page 30: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Pupfishes (Cyprinodon nevadensis)

• Adults tolerate 0 – 42°C

• Found in cold to hot springs across range

• Eggs develop at 20-36°C

• Need access to a sink habitat to persist

Page 31: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Biotic Factors - Competition

• Exploitative

• Interference

• Ranges are often reflection of “ghosts of competition” past – example Connell’s barnacle study

Page 32: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Kangaroo Rats (Didymops spp.) – was it competition?

• Same niche• Two disjunct species• Realized niche of 3

species segregated by substrate

• Competitive exclusion?• Resource partitioning?• Parapatric speciation?• No evidence of

competition on edges

Page 33: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.
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Biotic Effects - Predation

• Community regulator

• Coevolutionary mechanism

Page 38: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Loss of Barriers

Page 39: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Keystone Predator

Implications outside range of otter?

Page 40: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Mutualism – Correlate to Distribution?

Page 41: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Diffuse Competition

• MacArthur (1972) – southern limits of many N. Amer. Birds not attributable to– Abiotic factors– Habitat limitation– Competition or Predation

• 202 land birds in Texas, only 29 found in Panama; Panama 564 land bird species

Page 42: Fundamental Unit of Biogeography Geographic Range.

Yellow warbler (Dendroica petechia) – one of the 29 found in both.Insectivore, limited to mangrove swamps and islands in tropics