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      Aquatic Biodiversity in the Amazon: Habitat Specialization and Geographic Isolation Promote Species Richness

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          Abstract

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          The immense rainforest ecosystems of tropical America represent some of the greatest concentrations of biodiversity on the planet. Prominent among these are evolutionary radiations of freshwater fishes, including electric eels, piranhas, stingrays, and a myriad of small-bodied and colorful tetras, cichlids, and armored catfishes. In all, the many thousands of these forms account for nearly 10% of all the vertebrate species on Earth. This article explores the complimentary roles that ecological and geographic filters play in limiting dispersal in aquatic species, and how these factors contribute to the accumulation of species richness over broad geographic and evolutionary time scales.

          Abstract

          The Neotropical freshwater ichthyofauna has among the highest species richness and density of any vertebrate fauna on Earth, with more than 5,600 species compressed into less than 12% of the world's land surface area, and less than 0.002% of the world's total liquid water supply. How have so many species come to co-exist in such a small amount of total habitat space? Here we report results of an aquatic faunal survey of the Fitzcarrald region in southeastern Peru, an area of low-elevation upland (200–500 m above sea level) rainforest in the Western Amazon, that straddles the headwaters of four large Amazonian tributaries; the Juruá (Yurúa), Ucayali, Purús, and Madre de Dios rivers. All measures of fish species diversity in this region are high; there is high alpha diversity with many species coexisting in the same locality, high beta diversity with high turnover between habitats, and high gamma diversity with high turnover between adjacent tributary basins. Current data show little species endemism, and no known examples of sympatric sister species, within the Fitzcarrald region, suggesting a lack of localized or recent adaptive divergences. These results support the hypothesis that the fish species of the Fitzcarrald region are relatively ancient, predating the Late Miocene-Pliocene ( c. 4 Ma) uplift that isolated its several headwater basins. The results also suggest that habitat specialization (phylogenetic niche conservatism) and geographic isolation (dispersal limitation) have contributed to the maintenance of high species richness in this region of the Amazon Basin.

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          Plant diversity in tropical forests: a review of mechanisms of species coexistence

          Evidence concerning mechanisms hypothesized to explain species coexistence in hyper-diverse communities is reviewed for tropical forest plants. Three hypotheses receive strong support. Niche differences are evident from non-random spatial distributions along micro-topographic gradients and from a survivorship-growth tradeoff during regeneration. Host-specific pests reduce recruitment near reproductive adults (the Janzen-Connell effect), and, negative density dependence occurs over larger spatial scales among the more abundant species and may regulate their populations. A fourth hypothesis, that suppressed understory plants rarely come into competition with one another, has not been considered before and has profound implications for species coexistence. These hypotheses are mutually compatible. Infrequent competition among suppressed understory plants, niche differences, and Janzen-Connell effects may facilitate the coexistence of the many rare plant species found in tropical forests while negative density dependence regulates the few most successful and abundant species.
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            The Canonical Distribution of Commonness and Rarity: Part I

            F. Preston (1962)
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              Patterns in Freshwater Fish Ecology

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Animals (Basel)
                Animals (Basel)
                Animals
                Animals : an Open Access Journal from MDPI
                MDPI
                2076-2615
                June 2011
                29 April 2011
                : 1
                : 2
                : 205-241
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biology, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Lafayette, LA 70504, USA; E-Mails: tiagobio2002@ 123456yahoo.com.br (T.P.C.); arbeitenschnell@ 123456yahoo.com (M.A.H.); e.maxime@ 123456hotmail.fr (E.L.M.)
                [2 ]The Nature Conservancy and Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, MA 02138, USA; E-Mail: ppetry@ 123456tnc.org
                [3 ]Museo de Historia Natural, Universidad Nacional de San Marcos, Lima, Peru; E-Mails: jessicaadela@ 123456hotmail.com (J.E.); mycorahua@ 123456yahoo.es (I.C.); rquispe73@ 123456yahoo.com.mx (R.Q.); brengifo@ 123456fondoamericas.org.pe (B.R.); hortega.musm@ 123456gmail.com (H.O.)
                [4 ]Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil; E-Mail: reis@ 123456pucrs.br
                Author notes
                [* ]Author to whom correspondence should be addressed; E-Mail: jalbert@ 123456louisiana.edu .
                Article
                animals-01-00205
                10.3390/ani1020205
                4513461
                26486313
                96463377-7721-45b2-8517-eb690441f092
                © 2011 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

                This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).

                History
                : 22 February 2011
                : 21 April 2011
                : 22 April 2011
                Categories
                Article

                freshwater fishes,geodispersal,species diversity,species richness,stream capture,tropical rainforest,vicariance

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