Tropical mountains harbor exceptionally high biodiversity, which is in part due to the marked elevational stratification of tropical biotas. However, the factors that influence the evolution of elevational distributions remain uncertain. I used a database of sister species of tropical montane birds from 41 families and three regions—the Neotropics, the Himalayas, and New Guinea—to test whether patterns of elevational divergence were consistent with (1) a stochastic process, (2) ecological sorting of elevational divergence that occurred in allopatry, or (3) elevational divergence driven by competitive interactions upon secondary contact. The stochastic and ecological sorting hypotheses predict that increased elevational divergence in sympatr...
Aim Using a global data base of the distribution of extant bird species, we examine the evidence for...
Abstract Aim: What factors set species' range edges? One general hypothesis, often attributed to Dar...
Topographically complex regions often contain the close juxtaposition of closely related species alo...
Tropical mountains harbor exceptionally high biodiversity, which is in part due to the marked elevat...
Tropical mountains harbor exceptionally high biodiversity, which is in part due to the marked elevat...
Tropical mountains are the most biodiverse terrestrial systems on Earth. This "megadiversity" is lar...
Does competition influence patterns of coexistence between closely related taxa? Here we address thi...
Aim We examine latitudinal effects of breeding bird taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional β-diversi...
1.Most tropical bird species have narrow elevational ranges, likely reflecting climatic specializati...
The importance of ecologically-mediated divergent selection in elevating rates of trait evolution ha...
Examining patterns of biodiversity in the Tropical Andes provides insight into ecological and evolut...
A key question about macroevolutionary speciation rates is whether they are controlled by microevolu...
Interspecific competition is hypothesized to be a strong force that sets species range limits and dr...
Interspecific competition is hypothesized to be a strong force that sets species range limits and dr...
Interspecific competition is hypothesized to be a strong force that sets species range limits and dr...
Aim Using a global data base of the distribution of extant bird species, we examine the evidence for...
Abstract Aim: What factors set species' range edges? One general hypothesis, often attributed to Dar...
Topographically complex regions often contain the close juxtaposition of closely related species alo...
Tropical mountains harbor exceptionally high biodiversity, which is in part due to the marked elevat...
Tropical mountains harbor exceptionally high biodiversity, which is in part due to the marked elevat...
Tropical mountains are the most biodiverse terrestrial systems on Earth. This "megadiversity" is lar...
Does competition influence patterns of coexistence between closely related taxa? Here we address thi...
Aim We examine latitudinal effects of breeding bird taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional β-diversi...
1.Most tropical bird species have narrow elevational ranges, likely reflecting climatic specializati...
The importance of ecologically-mediated divergent selection in elevating rates of trait evolution ha...
Examining patterns of biodiversity in the Tropical Andes provides insight into ecological and evolut...
A key question about macroevolutionary speciation rates is whether they are controlled by microevolu...
Interspecific competition is hypothesized to be a strong force that sets species range limits and dr...
Interspecific competition is hypothesized to be a strong force that sets species range limits and dr...
Interspecific competition is hypothesized to be a strong force that sets species range limits and dr...
Aim Using a global data base of the distribution of extant bird species, we examine the evidence for...
Abstract Aim: What factors set species' range edges? One general hypothesis, often attributed to Dar...
Topographically complex regions often contain the close juxtaposition of closely related species alo...