Animal Biodiversity and Conservation. Volume 40.2 (2017) Pages: 165-174
La diversidad funcional en comunidades animales: una revisión que hace énfasis en los vertebrados
Gómez-Ortiz, Y., Moreno, C. E.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2017.40.0165Download
PDFAbstract
Functional diversity in animal communities: a review with emphasis on vertebrates
Functional diversity is the variety of functional roles that species have in ecosystems. As its study in animal communities is still emerging, the aim of this review is to provide an informative reference on the basic concepts and advances in the quantification of functional diversity and its applications to vertebrates. The most studied groups to date are fish and birds, followed by mammals. Amphibians and reptiles have received less attention despite their high potential for the study of functional diversity. Protocols are available for the direct and standardized measure of functional traits in birds, amphibians and freshwater fish. No guides are yet available, however, for mammals and reptiles and functional traits are usually taken from the literature. To complement and to promote the measurement of functional traits in vertebrates, we provide a list of potential traits for the analysis of functional diversity in different subgroups of mammals and in reptiles.
Cite
Gómez-Ortiz, Y., Moreno, C. E., 2017. La diversidad funcional en comunidades animales: una revisión que hace énfasis en los vertebrados. Animal Biodiversity and Conservation, 40: 165-174, DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2017.40.0165-
Reception date:
- 25/11/2016
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Acceptation date:
- 14/02/2017
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Publication date:
- 22/03/2017
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