Brown J.H. and P.F. Nicoletto. 1991. Scaling of species
composition – body masses of North American land mammals. American Naturalist
138:1478-1512.
Blog by Kaitlyn Sullivan
Paper Authors: James H. Brown & Paul F. Nicoletto
(Commentary by Felisa A. Smith)
James H. Brown
·
Professor of Biology at the University of New Mexico
·
Bachelor of Arts, Zoology, 1963, Cornell University
·
Ph.D., Zoology, 1967, University of Michigan
Research Interests:
“Community ecology
and biogeography, with special projects on granivory in desert ecosystems;
biogeography of insular habitats; and structure of dynamics of geographic-scale
assemblages of many species.”
Paul F. Nicoletto
·
Professor and Chair of the
Department of Biology at Lamar University
Research Interests:
”Dr. Nicoletto is a behavioral ecologist interested in animal
communication and mating systems. His primary interests are in the
physiological costs of ornamentation and courtship behavior and their
relationship to male physical condition. A current project in development is
assessing sound production in pupfish and its use in mating displays. He is
also working on survey of reptiles and amphibians in Village Creek State Park.”
Paul F. Nicoletto. (n.d.). Retrieved February 28, 2017, from https://artssciences.lamar.edu/biology/faculty-staff/paul-f-nicoletto.html
Felisa A. Smith
·
Professor of Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology at the University of New Mexico
Research Interests:
“Paleoecological and evolutionary research; effects of current
global and past climatic change on mammals”.
F.A. Smith. (n.d.). Retrieved March 01, 2017, from
https://biology.unm.edu/core-faculty/smith.shtml
Summary
In this paper, Brown and Nicoletto used the body mass of organisms
to examine patterns “of mammalian communities across varying spatial
scale”. Through their research, they
found that “at a local level, the body size structure of communities appeared
to be uniform on a logarithmic scale”.
Significant differences in mean, median, and skew suggested that the
species coexisting within a local site, are a nonrandom subset from the
regional species pool. This also implies
that there is a limited number of species from each body size that can coexist
in the same location at the same time.
In their
abstract, they propose a mechanistic hypothesis, stating “we hypothesize that
three mechanisms are necessary and possibly sufficient to produce this result:
1.
Competitive exclusion of species
of similar size within local habitats
2.
Differential extinction if
species of large size with small geographic ranges
3.
Greater specialization of
modal-sized species owing to energetic and dietary constraints”.
This hypothesis is based
off the observed pattern of assembly among North American terrestrial mammals
which “indicates that species of modal size (20-250 g) tend not to coexist in
local habitat patches and they replace each other more frequently from habitat
to habitat across the landscape than species of relatively large or small
size”.
To test the
variations in the distributions of body sizes among species in regards to
spatial scale, the frequency distributions for three scales, the entire
continent of North America, regional biomes, and local habitat patches.
They concluded
“that the processes for operating over a wide range of spatial scales ---- from
interspecific interactions that affect coexistence within local habitats to
colonization, speciation, and extinction events that affect the distribution of
species over the continent --- interact to determine the composition of the
biota at all scales from local to continental”.
Questions
How has this model influenced current conservation strategies?
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteRe-post! Accidentally posted before I was done;
ReplyDeleteInteresting paper! So I had some questions:
- This might be a silly one but... what do they mean when they say highly modal? Is this to do with the mode?
- They mention that did did not include some species e.g. bats, cetaceans... was there a reason for this or was this just lack of data?