An academic publishing model in which journals do not charge fees to either authors or readers.

Average time for first decision (excluding desk-rejections): 5 weeks

Animal Biodiversity and Conservation. Volume 27.2 (2004) Pages: 57-66

Effects of natural phenomena and human activity on the species richness of endemic and non-endemic Heteroptera in the Canary Islands

Vargas, J. M., Guerrero, J. C., Real, R.

Download

PDF

Abstract

The geographical patterns of Heteroptera species diversity in the Canary Islands were analysed, and endemic and non–endemic species were studied both together and separately. Causal processes most likely controlling these patterns, as well as the theory of island biogeography, hypotheses about evolutionary time, habitat heterogeneity, climatic stability, intermediate disturbances, energy, environmental favourableness–severity, productivity and human influence were investigated. The combination of habitat heterogeneity and human influence accounted for the total number of species. However, when endemic and non–endemic species were analysed separately, habitat heterogeneity and favourableness–severity explained the richness of endemic species, whereas habitat heterogeneity and human influence explained that of non–endemic species.

Keywords

Canary Islands, Heteroptera, Species richness, Biogeography

Cite

Vargas, J. M., Guerrero, J. C., Real, R., 2004. Effects of natural phenomena and human activity on the species richness of endemic and non-endemic Heteroptera in the Canary Islands. Animal Biodiversity and Conservation, 27: 57-66

Share

Visits

1487

Downloads

584

Content appears on: