This study compares the phylogenetic structure in the Canary Islands and Hawaii by means of the distributions of the species number for plant families (Taxonomic evenness) and lineages (Phylogenetic evenness) across archipelagos and across habitats in both archipelagos using the Gini coefficient. We then investigate phylogenies to identify particular habitats contributing to such differences using Taxonomic distinctness (AvTD) and its variation (VarTD). Our results show that the distribution of species number among Hawaiian lineages is much more uneven than the Canary Islands. In contrast, Hawaii produces a more even distribution of species number by family than the Canary Islands. This may be due to the Hawaiian Flora being derived ...
Aim: How spatial, historical and ecological processes drive diversity patterns remains one of the ma...
Aim: Little is known about how diversification occurs within long-lived, highly dispersible and cont...
Speciation on islands, and particularly the divergence of species in situ, has long been debated. He...
Islands are ideal for investigating processes that shape species assemblages because they are isolat...
Islands are ideal for investigating processes that shape species assemblages because they are isolat...
Why do some species have broad geographic distributions, while other species are confined to a narro...
Ecological conditions, such as high habitat diversity and the absence of competitors, have been prop...
A fundamental question in evolutionary ecology and conservation biology is: why do some areas contai...
This paper introduces the integration of additive partitioning with species—area relationships to is...
Copyright © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.AIM: We explore the island species–area relationships (ISA...
Islands are hotspots of plant endemism and are particularly vulnerable to the establishment (natural...
Background: Oceanic archipelagos typically harbour extensive radiations of flowering plants and a hi...
Aim: Species–area relationships (SARs) on oceanic archipelagos are shaped at least as much by specia...
Understanding species' ability to colonize new habitats is a key knowledge allowing us to predict sp...
<div><p>Understanding species' ability to colonize new habitats is a key knowledge allowing us to pr...
Aim: How spatial, historical and ecological processes drive diversity patterns remains one of the ma...
Aim: Little is known about how diversification occurs within long-lived, highly dispersible and cont...
Speciation on islands, and particularly the divergence of species in situ, has long been debated. He...
Islands are ideal for investigating processes that shape species assemblages because they are isolat...
Islands are ideal for investigating processes that shape species assemblages because they are isolat...
Why do some species have broad geographic distributions, while other species are confined to a narro...
Ecological conditions, such as high habitat diversity and the absence of competitors, have been prop...
A fundamental question in evolutionary ecology and conservation biology is: why do some areas contai...
This paper introduces the integration of additive partitioning with species—area relationships to is...
Copyright © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.AIM: We explore the island species–area relationships (ISA...
Islands are hotspots of plant endemism and are particularly vulnerable to the establishment (natural...
Background: Oceanic archipelagos typically harbour extensive radiations of flowering plants and a hi...
Aim: Species–area relationships (SARs) on oceanic archipelagos are shaped at least as much by specia...
Understanding species' ability to colonize new habitats is a key knowledge allowing us to predict sp...
<div><p>Understanding species' ability to colonize new habitats is a key knowledge allowing us to pr...
Aim: How spatial, historical and ecological processes drive diversity patterns remains one of the ma...
Aim: Little is known about how diversification occurs within long-lived, highly dispersible and cont...
Speciation on islands, and particularly the divergence of species in situ, has long been debated. He...