The increase in species richness from the poles to the tropics, referred to as the latitudinal diversity gradient, is one of the most ubiquitous biodiversity patterns in the natural world. Although understanding how rates of speciation and extinction vary with latitude is central to explaining this pattern, such analyses have been impeded by the difficulty of estimating diversification rates associated with specific geographic locations. Here, we use a powerful phylogenetic approach and a nearly complete phylogeny of mammals to estimate speciation, extinction, and dispersal rates associated with the tropical and temperate biomes. Overall, speciation rates are higher, and extinction rates lower, in the tropics than in temperate regions. The ...
Life on Earth is conspicuously more diverse in the tropics. Although this intriguing geographical pa...
Evolutionary rate explanations for latitudinal diversity gradients predict faster speciation and div...
AIM Phylogenetic endemism (PE) identifies geographic concentrations of evolutionarily isolated an...
The increase in species richness from the poles to the tropics, referred to as the latitudinal diver...
<p>From left to right, global latitudinal diversity gradient of all mammals, and posterior distribut...
<p>(Left panels) Mammalian orders (the eight most species-rich orders—covering 92% of all mammals—ar...
<div><p>The latitudinal diversity gradient has been considered a consequence of a shift in the impac...
AimUnderstanding the relative contribution of diversification rates (speciation and extinction) and ...
We reviewed published phylogenies and selected 111 phylogenetic studies representing mammals, birds,...
Life on Earth is conspicuously more diverse in the tropics. Although this intriguing geographical pa...
A latitudinal gradient in biodiversity has existed since before the time of the dinosaurs, yet how a...
The latitudinal diversity gradient in which species diversity is highest near the equator and declin...
Life on Earth is conspicuously more diverse in the tropics. Although this intriguing geographical pa...
Evolutionary rate explanations for latitudinal diversity gradients predict faster speciation and div...
AIM Phylogenetic endemism (PE) identifies geographic concentrations of evolutionarily isolated an...
The increase in species richness from the poles to the tropics, referred to as the latitudinal diver...
<p>From left to right, global latitudinal diversity gradient of all mammals, and posterior distribut...
<p>(Left panels) Mammalian orders (the eight most species-rich orders—covering 92% of all mammals—ar...
<div><p>The latitudinal diversity gradient has been considered a consequence of a shift in the impac...
AimUnderstanding the relative contribution of diversification rates (speciation and extinction) and ...
We reviewed published phylogenies and selected 111 phylogenetic studies representing mammals, birds,...
Life on Earth is conspicuously more diverse in the tropics. Although this intriguing geographical pa...
A latitudinal gradient in biodiversity has existed since before the time of the dinosaurs, yet how a...
The latitudinal diversity gradient in which species diversity is highest near the equator and declin...
Life on Earth is conspicuously more diverse in the tropics. Although this intriguing geographical pa...
Evolutionary rate explanations for latitudinal diversity gradients predict faster speciation and div...
AIM Phylogenetic endemism (PE) identifies geographic concentrations of evolutionarily isolated an...