Habitat islands and the equilibrium theory of island biogeography: testing some predictions
- 1 April 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 75 (3) , 426-429
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00376947
Abstract
Species-area data from a study of marsh birds are used to test five predictions generated by the equilibrium theory of island biogeography. Three predictions are supported: we found a significant species-area relationship, a non-zero level of turnover, and a variance-mean ratio of 0.5. One prediction is rejected: the extinction rates were not greater on small islands. The results of one test are equivocal: the number of species on each island was not always the same. As Gilbert (1980) suggests, a strong species-area relationship alone does not validate the theory. The avian communities we studied were on habitat islands, not true islands, and underwent complete extinction annually. Thus caution must be used before applying the theory to these and other habitat islands.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Habitat Heterogeneity on the Species-Area Relationships of Forest BirdsJournal of Biogeography, 1986
- Ecological Distribution and Crude Density of Breeding Birds on Prairie WetlandsThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1984
- The Equilibrium Theory of Island Biogeography: Fact or Fiction?Journal of Biogeography, 1980
- Species turnover in deciduous forest vegetationPlant Ecology, 1978
- Island Biogeography and Conservation: Strategy and LimitationsScience, 1976
- Short-Time-Base Studies of Turnover in Breeding Bird Populations on the California Channel IslandsOrnithological Applications, 1976
- Fish Species Diversity in LakesThe American Naturalist, 1974
- Insular Biogeography in Continental Regions. II. Cave Faunas from Tessin, Southern SwitzerlandSystematic Zoology, 1973
- Mammals on Mountaintops: Nonequilibrium Insular BiogeographyThe American Naturalist, 1971
- Insular Biogeography in Continental Regions. I. The Northern Andes of South AmericaThe American Naturalist, 1970