1 / 35

Dispersal

Dispersal. Movement of species leading to range expansion Hotly debated Dispersalists vs. Extensionists Continental drift changed debate Long-distance distance dispersal vs. vicariance Read Box 6.1. Diffusion Dispersal. Slow expansion from previous range into new areas

teleri
Télécharger la présentation

Dispersal

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dispersal • Movement of species leading to range expansion • Hotly debated • Dispersalists vs. Extensionists • Continental drift changed debate • Long-distance distance dispersal vs. vicariance • Read Box 6.1

  2. Diffusion Dispersal • Slow expansion from previous range into new areas • Gradual process as species acclimate to conditions and taxa at margins of range • Can follow jump dispersal (next example)

  3. Cattle egret (Bubulcus ibis) • Arrived by flying from Africa in late 1800s

  4. European starling (Sturnus vulgaris) • Intro to Central Park in 1896 • Wanted birds of Shakespeare

  5. Oaks across Britain and Ireland

  6. Jump Dispersal • Species “skips” over area outside its range to new location • Island colonization • Some species lacking from islands – limited ability to disperse (mammals, amphibians, freshwater fishes) • Also occurs across continents

  7. Recolonization of Krakatau

  8. Secular Dispersal • Evolutionary divergence through range expansion • Evolutionary time scale

  9. Mechanisms of Dispersal • Active • Capacity to travel long distances (flight, walking, or swimming) • Best example are migratory animals

  10. Migratory route of golden plover (Pluvialis dominica)

  11. Mechanisms of Dispersal • Passive • Wind, water, or on animals • Plants best examples • Also animals (insects), fungi, and bacteria • Phoresy – animal hitching a ride on another animal for dispersal

  12. Water Dispersal

  13. Phoresy

  14. Barriers • Long-distance dispersal • Encounter obstacles • Unfavorable environmental conditions • Tolerate, overcome, or dead end?

  15. Physiological Barriers • Conditions fall outside range of tolerance • Not able to cross barriers • History of area may have allowed passage and distributions seen today • Freshwater lake fishes – only found in multiple locations if lakes were connected at one time • Some lakes are fishless – not because of tolerance • Marine fish vs. freshwater fish

  16. v Sheephead minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus)

  17. Contrast with Centrarchids

  18. Differences in mountain barriers – temperate vs. tropics

  19. Mammals, reptiles, etc. – aided by past vegatation

  20. Temporal barriers – temperate/polar water bodies. Movement over ice

  21. Ecological Barriers • Competition • Predation • Habitats – refusal to cross

  22. Corridors • Allow dispersal by permitting movement • Contemporary examples • Historical – account for related of different species or even same species in widely separated regions

  23. Tethyan Seaway

  24. Filters • Restrictive dispersal pathway • Conditions restrictive to some species, not others • Can be biotic or abiotic

  25. Two-way Filter

More Related