Rate of Lineage Origin Explains the Diversity Anomaly in the World’s Mangrove Vegetation
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-2006
Abstract
The contribution of nonecological factors to global patterns in diversity is evident when species richness differs between regions with similar habitats and geographic area. Mangrove environments in the Eastern Hemisphere harbor six times as many species of trees and shrubs as similar environments in the New World. Genetic divergence of mangrove lineages from terrestrial relatives, in combination with fossil evidence, suggests that mangrove diversity is limited by evolutionary transition into the stressful marine environment, the number of mangrove lineages has increased steadily over the Tertiary with little global extinction, and the diversity anomaly in mangrove vegetation reflects regional differences in the rate of origin of new mangrove lineages.
Recommended Citation
Ricklefs, R. E., Schwarzbach, A. E., & Renner, S. S. (2006). Rate of lineage origin explains the diversity anomaly in the world’s mangrove vegetation. The American Naturalist, 168(6), 805-810. https://doi.org/10.1086/508711
Publication Title
The American Naturalist
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/508711
Comments
© 2006 by The University of Chicago.