Is speciation driven by species diversity?
Carlos Daniel Cadena (),
Robert E. Ricklefs,
Iván Jiménez and
Eldredge Bermingham
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Carlos Daniel Cadena: University of Missouri
Robert E. Ricklefs: University of Missouri
Iván Jiménez: Center for Conservation and Sustainable Development
Eldredge Bermingham: Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Nature, 2005, vol. 438, issue 7064, E1-E2
Abstract:
Abstract Arising from: B. C. Emerson & N. Kolm Nature 434, 1015–1017 (2005); B. C. Emerson & N. Kolm reply Emerson and Kolm1 show that the proportion of species endemic to an island is positively related to its species richness and, assuming that endemism indexes speciation rate, they infer that greater species diversity accelerates diversification. Here we demonstrate that the same correlation between species richness and percentage endemism can arise even if within-island speciation is negligible, particularly when both endemism and species richness depend on attributes of islands (such as area) that influence the average age of resident populations. Island biogeography theory indicates that, where the average time to extinction is relatively long, diversity increases through colonization, irrespective of whether new species are formed2; at the same time, islands on which populations persist for longer accumulate more endemic species as local populations differentiate and populations on neighbouring islands become extinct3,4. We therefore suggest that species richness and endemism are correlated fortuitously owing to their mutual dependence on the life spans of populations on islands, which is unrelated to speciation itself.
Date: 2005
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DOI: 10.1038/nature04308
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