■■Biogeography, the study of organisms’ geo-
graphic distributions, has both historical and
ecological components. Certain distributions
are the consequence of long-term evolutionary
history; others are the result of current ecological
factors.
■■The geographic distributions of organisms
provided Darwin and Wallace with some of their
strongest evidence for the reality of evolution.
■■The historical processes that affect the dis-
tribution of a taxon are extinction, dispersal,
and vicariance (fragmentation of a continuous
distribution by the emergence of a barrier).
These processes may be affected or accompa-
nied by environmental change, adaptation, and
speciation.
■■Histories of dispersal or vicariance can often be
inferred from phylogenetic data.
■■Disjunct distributions are attributable in some
instances to vicariance, but dispersal seems to be
the more common cause.
■■Genetic patterns of geographic variation within
species can provide information on historical
changes in a species’ distribution.
■■The local distribution of species is affected by
ecological factors, including both abiotic aspects
of the environment and biotic features such as
competitors and predators. Why species do not
enlarge their ranges indefinitely, by incremen-
tally adapting to conditions farther and farther
away, is a major question in evolutionary biology.
■■Geographic patterns in the number and diver-
sity of species may stem partly from current
ecological factors, but long-term evolutionary
history also may explain them.
TERMS AnD ConCEPTS
biogeographic
realm
biogeography
competitive
exclusion
principle
disjunct distribution
dispersal
ecological
biogeography
endemic
fundamental
ecological niche
historical
biogeography
phylogenetic niche
conservatism
phylogeography
vicariance
Wallace’s line
SuGGESTionS foR fuRTHER READinG
M. v. lomolino, B. R. Riddle, R. J. Whittaker, and
J. H. Brown, Biogeography, 5th edition (Sinau-
er Associates, Sunderland, MA, 2017), is the
leading textbook of biogeography.
A. de Queiros has written about the role of
dispersal in the evolution of distributions in a
book for a general audience, The Monkey’s
Voyage: How Improbable Journeys Shaped
the History of Life (Basic Books, new york,
2014).
Phylogeography is treated in depth by J. C.
Avise in Phylogeography (Harvard university
Press, Cambridge, MA, 2000), and human
phylogeography is included in E. E. Harris’s
Ancestors in Our Genome: The New Science
of Human Evolution (oxford university Press,
oxford, uK, 2015).
PRoBlEMS AnD DiSCuSSion ToPiCS
- until recently, the plant family Dipterocarpaceae
was thought to be restricted to tropical Asia,
where many species are ecologically domi-
nant trees. However, a new species of tree in
this family was discovered in the rainforest of
Colombia, in northern South America. What
hypotheses could account for this tree’s pres-
ence in South America, and how could you test
those hypotheses?
2. Except for birds and bats, there are almost no
native land vertebrates in new Zealand. There is
one native frog species, a few lizard species, and
several species of flightless birds. There are no
snakes, freshwater fishes, or terrestrial mammals.
What might explain this situation? is this biota
more likely derived by dispersal from another
region or by vicariance? What is the significance
of the missing elements, such as the freshwater
fishes?
SuMMARy
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