Artículo de revista
Do Rapoport's rule, the mid-domain effect or the source-sink hypotheses predict bathymetric patterns of polychaete richness on the Pacific coast of South America?
Fecha
2008-05Registro en:
Global Ecology & Biogeography, Volume 17, Number 3, pp. 415-423(9), 2008
1466-8238
Autor
Moreno, Rodrigo A.
Rivadeneira, Marcelo
Hernández, Cristián
Sampértegui, Sandra
Rozbaczylo, Nicolás
Institución
Resumen
Aim
We evaluated the bathymetric gradient of benthic polychaete species richness
from the Chilean coast, as well as its possible underlying causes. We tested three
possible hypotheses to explain the richness gradient: (1) Rapoport’s effect; (2) the
mid-domain effect (MDE); and (c) the source–sink hypothesis.
Location
South-eastern Pacific coast of Chile.
Methods
The bathymetric gradient in richness was evaluated using the reported
ranges of bathymetric distribution of 498 polychaete species, from the intertidal to
abyssal zone (
c.
4700 m). Rapoport’s effect was evaluated by examining the relationship
between bathymetric mid-point and bathymetric range extent, and species richness
and depth. The MDE was tested using the Monte Carlo simulation program. The
source–sink hypothesis was tested through nestedness analysis.
Results
Species richness shows significant exponential decay across the bathymetric
gradient. The pattern is characterized by a high presence of short-ranged species on
the continental shelf area; while only a few species reach abyssal depths, and they tend
to show extremely wide bathymetric ranges. Our simulation analyses showed that, in
general, the pattern is robust to sampling artefacts. This pattern cannot be reproduced
by the MDE, which predicts a parabolic richness gradient. Rather, results agree with
the predictions of Rapoport’s effect. Additionally, the data set is significantly nested
at species, genus and family levels, supporting the source–sink hypothesis.
Main conclusions
The sharp exponential decay in benthic polychaete richness
across the bathymetric gradient supports the general idea that abyssal environments
should harbour fewer species than shallower zones. This pattern may be the result of
colonization–extinction dynamics, characterized by abyssal assemblages acting as
‘sinks’ maintained mainly by shallower ‘sources’. The source–sink hypothesis
provides a conceptual and methodological framework that may shed light on the
search for general patterns of diversity across large spatial scales.