SILAHKAN MENGGUNAKAN " MESIN TRANSLATE "..GOOGLE TRANSLATE
DISAMPING KANAN INI.............
PLEASE USE ........ "TRANSLATE MACHINE" .. GOOGLE TRANSLATE BESIDE RIGHT THIS
.....................................
DISAMPING KANAN INI.............
PLEASE USE ........ "TRANSLATE MACHINE" .. GOOGLE TRANSLATE BESIDE RIGHT THIS
.....................................
Faktor
lingkungan membatasi keragaman spesies, studi kadal ditemukan
Environmental factors limit species diversity, lizard study finds
Date:
December 29,
2010
Source:
University of Rochester
Summary:
New research on lizards in the Caribbean demonstrates
that species diversification is limited by the environment. The finding
supports and extends the MacArthur-Wilson theory of island biogeography.
..........................
New research on lizards in the Caribbean demonstrates that
species diversification is limited by the environment. The finding supports and
extends the MacArthur-Wilson theory of island biogeography.
It's long
been accepted by biologists that environmental factors cause the diversity --
or number -- of species to increase before eventually leveling off. Some recent
work, however, has suggested that species diversity continues instead of
entering into a state of equilibrium. But new research on lizards in the
Caribbean not only supports the original theory that finite space, limited food
supplies, and competition for resources all work together to achieve
equilibrium; it builds on the theory by extending it over a much longer
timespan.
The research
was done by Daniel Rabosky of the University of California, Berkeley and
Richard Glor of the University of Rochester who studied patterns of species
accumulation of lizards over millions of years on the four Caribbean islands of
Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Hispaniola, and Cuba. Their paper is being published
December 21 in the journal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Glor and
Rabosky focused on species diversity -- the number of distinct species of
lizards -- not the number of individual lizards.
"Geographic
size correlates to diversity," said Glor. "In general, the larger the
area, the greater the number of species that can be supported. For example,
there are 60 species of Anolis lizards on Cuba, but far fewer species on the
much smaller islands of Jamaica and Puerto Rico." There are only 6 species
on Jamaica and 10 on Puerto Rico.
Ecologists
Robert MacArthur of Princeton University and E.O. Wilson of Harvard University
established the theory of island biogeography in the 1960s to explain the
diversity and richness of species in restricted habitats, as well as the limits
on the growth in number of species. Glor said the MacArthur-Wilson theory was developed
for ecological time-scales, which encompass thousands of years, while his work
with Rabosky extends the concepts over a million years. "MacArthur and
Wilson recognized the macroevolutionary implications of their work,"
explained Glor, "but focused on ecological time-scales for
simplicity."
Historically,
biologists needed fossil records to study patterns of species diversification
of lizards on the Caribbean islands. But advances in molecular methodology
allowed Glor and Rabosky to use DNA sequences to reconstruct evolutionary trees
that show the relationships between species.
The two
scientists found that species diversification of lizards on the four islands
reached a plateau millions of years ago and has essentially come to an end.
Glor said
the extent and quality of the data used in the research allowed him and Rabosky
to show that species diversification of lizards on the islands was not
continuing and had indeed entered a state of equilibrium.
"When
we look at other islands and continents that vary in species richness,"
said Glor, "we can't just consider rates of accumulation; we need to look
at the plateau points."
Glor
emphasizes that a state of equilibrium does not mean that the evolution of a
species comes to an end. Lizards will continue to adapt to changes in their
environment, but they are not expected to develop in a way that increases the
number of species within a habitat.
Glor
believes his work with Rabosky represents the "final word" on the
importance of limits on species diversity over the rate of speciation when
explaining the species-area relationship in anole lizards.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Rochester. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- D. L. Rabosky, R. E. Glor. Equilibrium speciation dynamics in a model adaptive radiation of island lizards. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1007606107