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Support for the habitat amount hypothesis from a global synthesis of species density studies

Title: Support for the habitat amount hypothesis from a global synthesis of species density studies
Authors: Watling, J
Arroyo-Rodríguez, V
Pfeifer, M
Baeten, L
Banks-Leite, C
Cisneros, L
Fang, R
Hamel-Leigue, C
Lachat, T
Leal, I
Lens, L
Possingham, H
Raheem, D
Ribeiro, D
Slade, E
Urbina-Cardona, N
Wood, E
Fahrig, L
Item Type: Dataset
Abstract: Decades of research suggest that species richness depends on spatial characteristics of habitat patches, especially their size and isolation. In contrast, the habitat amount hypothesis predicts that: 1) species richness in plots of fixed size (species density) is more strongly and positively related to the amount of habitat around the plot than to patch size or isolation; 2) habitat amount better predicts species density than patch size and isolation combined, 3) there is no effect of habitat fragmentation per se on species density; and 4) patch size and isolation effects do not become stronger with declining habitat amount. Data on eight taxonomic groups from 35 studies around the world support these predictions. Conserving species density requires minimizing habitat loss, irrespective of the configuration of the patches in which that habitat is contained.
Issue Date: 11-Feb-2020
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/105972
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.fbg79cnrj
Copyright Statement: https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Referenced By: https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13471
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Natural Sciences - Research Data