RIPARIAN ZONES INCREASE REGIONAL SPECIES RICHNESS BY HARBORING DIFFERENT, NOT MORE, SPECIES

  • John L. Sabo (Creator)
  • Ryan A. Sponseller (Creator)
  • Mark D. Dixon (Creator)
  • Kris Gade (Creator)
  • Tamara K. Harms (Creator)
  • Jim Heffernan (Creator)
  • Andrea Jani (Creator)
  • Gabrielle Katz (Creator)
  • Candan U. Soykan (Creator)
  • James Watts (Creator)
  • Jill R. Welter (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Riparian zones are habitats of critical conservation concern worldwide, as they are known to filter agricultural contaminants, buffer landscapes against erosion, and provide habitat for high numbers of species. Here we test the generality of the notion that riparian habitats harbor more species than adjacent upland habitats. Using previously published data collected from seven continents and including taxa ranging from Antarctic soil invertebrates to tropical rain forest lianas and primates, we show that riparian habitats do not harbor higher numbers of species, but rather support significantly different species pools altogether. In this way, riparian habitats increase regional (γ-) richness across the globe by >50%, on average. Thus conservation planners can easily increase the number of species protected in a regional portfolio by simply including a river within terrestrial biodiversity reserves. Our analysis also suggests numerous possible improvements for future studies of species richness gradients across riparian and upland habitats. First,
Date made available2016
PublisherFigshare

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