Arid
Hierarchical, Quantitative Biogeographic Provinces for All North American Turtles and Their Contribution to the Biogeography of Turtles and the Continent
Ennen, Joshua R.1; Matamoros, Wilfredo A.2; Agha, Mickey3; Lovich, Jeffrey E.4; Sweat, Sarah C.1; Hoagstrom, Christopher W.5
通讯作者Ennen, Joshua R.
来源期刊HERPETOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS
ISSN0733-1347
EISSN1938-5137
出版年2017
卷号31页码:114-140
英文摘要

Our study represents the first attempt to describe biogeographic provinces for North American (Mexico, United States, and Canada) turtles. We analyzed three nested data sets separately: (1) all turtles, (2) freshwater turtles, and (3) aquatic turtles. We georeferenced North American turtle distributions, then we created presence-absence matrices for each of the three data sets. We used watershed unit as biogeographic units. We conducted an unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic mean clustering analysis on each Jaccard index distance matrix from our watershed species matrices to delineate biogeographic provinces. Provinces were then tested for significant differences in species compositions in a global model with the use of a one-way analysis of similarity. We conducted a best subset of environmental variables with maximum (rank) correlation with community dissimilarities that determined the best model of abiotic variables explaining province delineation (i.e., climate, topography, and stream channel). To identify which species contributed the most to province delineations, we conducted an indicator species analysis and a similarity-percentage analysis. There were 16 all-turtle provinces, 15 freshwater provinces, and 13 aquatic provinces. Species compositions delineating the provinces were explained by abiotic variables, including mean annual precipitation, mean precipitation seasonality, and diversity of streams. Province delineations correspond closely with geographical boundaries, many of which have Pleistocene origins. For example, rivers with a history of carrying glacial runoff (e.g., Arkansas, Mississippi) sometimes dissect upland provinces, especially for aquatic and semiaquatic turtles. Compared with freshwater fishes, turtles show greater sensitivity to decreased temperature with restriction of most taxa south of the last permafrost maximum. Turtles also exhibit higher sensitivity to climatic, geomorphic, and tectonic instability, with richness and endemism concentrated along the more stable Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic (south of the last permafrost maximum) coasts. Although distribution data indicate two aquatic turtles are most cold tolerant (i.e., Chrysemys picta, Chelydra serpentina), aquatic turtles overall show the most restriction to warmer, wetter climates. Sequential addition of semiaquatic and terrestrial turtles into analyses shows, as expected, that these taxa flesh out turtle faunas in climatically harsh (e.g., grasslands) or remote (e.g., California, Sonoran Desert) regions. The turtle assemblages of southwestern versus southeastern North America are distinct. But there is a transition zone across the semiarid plains of the Texas Gulf Coast, High Plains, and Chihuahuan Desert, including a strong boundary congruent with the Cochise Filter-Barrier. This is not a simple subdivision of Neotropical versus Nearctic taxa, as some lineages from both realms span the transition zone.


英文关键词Biogeographic realms Blue Ridge Chelonian Cochise Filter-Barrier Faunal similarity Last permafrost maximum Nearctic Neotropical Pleistocene Rio Grande Rift Tortoises
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA ; Mexico
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000414438100006
WOS关键词LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER ; HOLOCENE DUNE ACTIVITY ; WESTERN UNITED-STATES ; NEBRASKA SAND HILLS ; FRESH-WATER ; SPECIES RICHNESS ; GREAT-PLAINS ; CHRYSEMYS-PICTA ; MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS ; BIODIVERSITY HOTSPOTS
WOS类目Zoology
WOS研究方向Zoology
来源机构United States Geological Survey ; University of California, Davis
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/199412
作者单位1.Tennessee Aquarium, Tennessee Aquarium Conservat Inst, 175 Baylor Sch Rd, Chattanooga, TN 37405 USA;
2.Univ Ciencias & Artes Chiapas, Fac Ciencias Biol, Museo Zool, Apartado Postal 29000, Mexico City, DF, Mexico;
3.Univ Calif Davis, Dept Wildlife Fish & Conservat Biol, One Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616 USA;
4.US Geol Survey, Southwest Biol Sci Ctr, 2255 North Gemini Dr, Flagstaff, AZ 86001 USA;
5.Weber State Univ, Dept Zool, 1415 Edvalson, Ogden, UT 84408 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Ennen, Joshua R.,Matamoros, Wilfredo A.,Agha, Mickey,et al. Hierarchical, Quantitative Biogeographic Provinces for All North American Turtles and Their Contribution to the Biogeography of Turtles and the Continent[J]. United States Geological Survey, University of California, Davis,2017,31:114-140.
APA Ennen, Joshua R.,Matamoros, Wilfredo A.,Agha, Mickey,Lovich, Jeffrey E.,Sweat, Sarah C.,&Hoagstrom, Christopher W..(2017).Hierarchical, Quantitative Biogeographic Provinces for All North American Turtles and Their Contribution to the Biogeography of Turtles and the Continent.HERPETOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS,31,114-140.
MLA Ennen, Joshua R.,et al."Hierarchical, Quantitative Biogeographic Provinces for All North American Turtles and Their Contribution to the Biogeography of Turtles and the Continent".HERPETOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS 31(2017):114-140.
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