Species richness and endemism of plant and bird communities along two gradients of elevation, humidity and land use in the Bolivian Andes Article

Kessler, M, Herzog, SK, Fjeldså, J et al. (2001). Species richness and endemism of plant and bird communities along two gradients of elevation, humidity and land use in the Bolivian Andes . DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, 7(1-2), 61-77. 10.1046/j.1472-4642.2001.00097.x

cited authors

  • Kessler, M; Herzog, SK; Fjeldså, J; Bach, K

abstract

  • We studied the patterns of species richness and range-size rarity (as a measure of endemism) of two plant groups (Pteridophyta, Bromeliaceae) and birds along two gradients of elevation, humidity and human land use in a forested Andean valley. Both transects covered the transition from an arid valley bottom through a cloud forest zone to relictual high-elevation Polylepis forest, but transects differed in overall precipitation. Plants were surveyed in 88 plots of 400 m2 each, while birds were detected primarily through visual observations and tape recordings over areas of 0.3-1.5 km2. Global range sizes of all species were mapped on 1°-grids and range-size rarity was calculated as the mean inverse range size of all species recorded in elevational steps of 200 m. Patterns of species richness and range-size rarity were mainly unrelated between and within study groups. Monotonic increases and decreases and hump-shaped patterns were observed for species richness as well as range-size rarity. Several of these patterns can be interpreted in the light of the ecological requirements of each taxonomic group, e.g. dependence of fern species richness on humidity or of bird richness on habitat complexity. Species richness of ferns and birds peaked at higher elevations along the less rainy transect, possibly as a result of higher levels of solar radiation and ecosystem productivity. Patterns of species richness and endemism of the study groups are causally unrelated and cannot be used to predict those of other groups at the spatial scale of this study. Human impact was highest in areas of mostly low to intermediate species richness, but was often high in zones of high endemism.

publication date

  • July 16, 2001

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 61

end page

  • 77

volume

  • 7

issue

  • 1-2