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      Colonial Legacies Influence Biodiversity Lessons: How Past Trade Routes and Power Dynamics Shape Present-Day Scientific Research and Professional Opportunities for Caribbean Scientists

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          The eBird enterprise: An integrated approach to development and application of citizen science

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            Is Open Access

            Distorted Views of Biodiversity: Spatial and Temporal Bias in Species Occurrence Data

            Boakes et al. compile and analyze a historical dataset of 170,000 bird sightings over two centuries and show how changing trends in data gathering may confound a true picture of biodiversity change.
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              Analysis of an evolutionary species-area relationship.

              Large islands typically have more species than comparable smaller islands. Ecological theories, the most influential being the equilibrium theory of island biogeography, explain the species-area relationship as the outcome of the effect of area on immigration and extinction rates. However, these theories do not apply to taxa on land masses, including continents and large islands, that generate most of their species in situ. In this case, species-area relationships should be driven by higher speciation rates in larger areas, a theory that has never been quantitatively tested. Here we show that Anolis lizards on Caribbean islands meet several expectations of the evolutionary theory. Within-island speciation exceeds immigration as a source of new species on all islands larger than 3,000 km2, whereas speciation is rare on smaller islands. Above this threshold island size, the rate of species proliferation increases with island area, a process that results principally from the positive effects of area on speciation rate. Also as expected, the slope of the species-area relationship jumps sharply above the threshold. Although Anolis lizards have been present on large Caribbean islands for over 30 million years, there are indications that the current number of species still falls below the speciation-extinction equilibrium.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The American Naturalist
                The American Naturalist
                University of Chicago Press
                0003-0147
                1537-5323
                May 31 2022
                : 000
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad, Trinidad and Tobago; and Biology, Williams College, Williamstown, Massachusetts 01267
                [2 ]National Museum of the Bahamas/Antiquities, Monuments, and Museums Corporation, Nassau, Bahamas
                [3 ]AEX Maritime Bahamas Museum, Freeport, Bahamas
                [4 ]Department of Anthropology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55454
                [5 ]Environmental Research Institute Charlotteville, Charlotteville, Tobago, Trinidad and Tobago
                [6 ]Center for Functional Anatomy and Evolution, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21287
                [7 ]Department of Ecology and Evolution and Consortium for Inter-Disciplinary Environmental Research, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York 11794
                [8 ]Department of Anthropology, Museum of Natural and Cultural History, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97401
                [9 ]Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia
                [10 ]Department of Biology, Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vermont 05753
                [11 ]Department of Environmental Studies, Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vermont 05753
                [12 ]Department of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712
                [13 ]Department of Natural History, Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611
                Article
                10.1086/720154
                35737983
                4c4e7e1b-1a04-4dce-b24e-ef95af0bfb94
                © 2022
                History

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