Species-area relation for birds of the Solomon Archipelago
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 73 (1) , 262-266
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.73.1.262
Abstract
Accurate values of number of breeding bird species have been obtained for 50 islands of the Solomon Archipelago. From information about species altitudinal distributions on each island, the values are apportioned into number of montane species (S(mt)) and of species present at sea-level (S(low)). S(low) increases linearly with the logarithm of island area A over a million-fold range of areas (correlation coefficient 0.99) and with a comparatively low slope, while the log S-log A relation is markedly curved. With increasing isolation of an archipelago, the species-area relation decreases in slope and may shift in form from a power function to an exponential. Comparison of Pacific archipelagoes at different distances from the colonization source of New Guinea shows that the decrease in slope is due to increasing intra-archipelago immigration rates, arising from overrepresentation of the most vagile inter-archipelago immigrants in more distant archipelagoes. When colonists are sorted into sets correlated with their dispersal abilities, the slope of the species-area relation for the most vagile set is close to zero, but for the least vagile set is close to the value predicted by Preston for "isolated universes."Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Colonization of Exploded Volcanic Islands by Birds: The Supertramp StrategyScience, 1974
- Biogeographic Kinetics: Estimation of Relaxation Times for Avifaunas of Southwest Pacific IslandsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1972
- Zoological Classification System of a Primitive PeopleScience, 1966
- Avifauna: Turnover on IslandsScience, 1965
- THE ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL OF INSULAR VARIATION IN BIRD SPECIES ABUNDANCEProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1964