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44.2A: Biogeography

  • Page ID
    14151
    • Boundless
    • Boundless
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    Biogeography is an ecological field of interest that focuses on the distribution of organisms and the abiotic factors that affect them.

    Learning Objectives
    • Explain the role of biogeography in the analysis of species distribution

    Key Points

    • The composition of plant and animal communities change as abiotic factors, which include temperature and altitude, start to vary.
    • Some species exist only in specific geographical areas while others can thrive in a variety of areas; however, no single species can be found everywhere in the world.
    • Studying an area where a species is not found is also of importance to ecologists in determining unique patterns of species distribution.
    • As with animals, plant species can also be either endemic, usually found in isolated land masses, or generalists, found in many regions.

    Key Terms

    • biogeography: the study of the geographical distribution of living things
    • generalist: species which can thrive in a wide variety of environmental conditions
    • endemic: unique to a particular area or region; not found in other places

    Biogeography

    Biogeography is the study of the geographic distribution of living things and the abiotic (non-living) factors that affect their distribution. Abiotic factors can include temperature, moisture, nutrients, oxygen, and energy availability, as well as disturbances from events such as wind and fire. Differences in temperature and rainfall are primarily based on latitude and elevation. As these abiotic factors change, the composition of plant and animal communities also changes. For example, if you were to begin a journey at the equator and walk north, you would notice gradual changes in plant communities. At the beginning of your journey, you would see tropical wet forests with broad-leaved evergreen trees, which are characteristic of plant communities found near the equator. As you continued to travel north, you would see these broad-leaved evergreen plants eventually give rise to seasonally-dry forests with scattered trees. You would also begin to notice changes in temperature and moisture. At about 30 degrees north, these forests would give way to deserts, which are characterized by low precipitation.

    Moving farther north, you would see that deserts are replaced by grasslands or prairies. Eventually, grasslands are replaced by deciduous temperate forests. These deciduous forests give way to the boreal forests found in the subarctic, the area south of the Arctic Circle. Finally, you would reach the Arctic tundra, which is found at the most northern latitudes. This trek north reveals gradual changes in both climate and the types of organisms that have adapted to environmental factors associated with ecosystems found at different latitudes. However, different ecosystems exist at the same latitude due in part to abiotic factors such as jet streams, the Gulf Stream, and ocean currents. If you were to hike up a mountain, the changes you would see in the vegetation would parallel those as you move to higher latitudes.

    Ecologists who study biogeography examine patterns of species distribution. No species exists everywhere. For example, the Venus flytrap is endemic to a small area in North and South Carolina. An endemic species is one which is naturally found only in a specific geographic area that is usually restricted in size. Other species are generalists, living in a wide variety of geographic areas. The raccoon, for example, is native to most of North and Central America.

    Species distribution patterns are based on biotic and abiotic factors and the influences these factors have had during the very long periods of time required for species evolution. Therefore, early studies of biogeography were closely linked to the emergence of evolutionary thinking in the eighteenth century. Some of the most distinctive assemblages of plants and animals occur in regions that have been physically separated for millions of years by geographic barriers. Biologists estimate that Australia, for example, has between 600,000 and 700,000 species of plants and animals. Approximately 3/4 of living plant and mammal species are endemic species found solely in Australia.

    image
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Endemic species of Australia: Australia is home to many endemic species. The (a) wallaby (Wallabia bicolor), a medium-sized member of the kangaroo family, is a pouched mammal, or marsupial. The (b) echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus) is an egg-laying mammal.

    Sometimes ecologists discover unique patterns of species distribution by determining where species are not found. Hawaii, for example, has no native land species of reptiles or amphibians and has only one native terrestrial mammal, the hoary bat. Most of New Guinea, as another example, lacks placental mammals.

    Plants can be endemic or generalists. Endemic plants are found only in specific regions of the earth, while generalists are found in many regions. Isolated land masses, such as Australia, Hawaii, and Madagascar, often have large numbers of endemic plant species. Some of these plants are endangered due to human activity. The forest gardenia (Gardenia brighamii), for instance, is endemic to Hawaii; only an estimated 15–20 trees are thought to exist.

    image
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Endangered forest gardenia: Listed as federally endangered, the forest gardenia is a small tree with distinctive flowers. It is found only in five of the Hawaiian Islands in small populations consisting of a few individual specimens.

    This page titled 44.2A: Biogeography is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Boundless.

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