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Variations of Environmental Niche Breadth, Range Sizes and Geographic Exclusion With Bat Species Richness

  • Julian Oeser*
  • , Damaris Zurell
  • , Frieder Mayer
  • , Emrah Çoraman
  • , Nia Toshkova
  • , Stanimira Deleva
  • , Ioseb Natradze
  • , Petr Benda
  • , Christian Dietz
  • , Panagiotis Georgiakakis
  • , Eran Levin
  • , Amit Dolev
  • , Heliana Dundarova
  • , Astghik Ghazaryan
  • , Sercan Irmak
  • , Nijat Hasanov
  • , Gulnar Guliyeva
  • , Mariya Gritsina
  • , Alexander Bukhnikashvili
  • , Tobias Kuemmerle
  • *Bu çalışma için yazışmadan sorumlu yazar
  • Humboldt University of Berlin
  • University of Potsdam
  • Museum für Naturkunde - Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science
  • Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
  • Ilia State University
  • National Museum
  • Charles University
  • Biologische Gutachten Dietz
  • University of Crete
  • Tel Aviv University
  • Nature and Park Authority
  • Yerevan State University
  • Istanbul Technical University
  • Balikesir University
  • Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences
  • Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Uzbekistan

Araştırma sonucu: Dergiye katkıMakalebilirkişi

1 Atıf (Scopus)

Özet

Aim: More species-rich communities are often assumed to contain more specialist species with narrower niches and smaller ranges. Stronger interspecific competition in species-rich communities is thought to be a key mechanism explaining these patterns. Yet, the relationship between richness and specialisation has so far only been studied for a few taxa, and characterising the effects of interspecific competition on species distributions is challenging. Here, we assess broad-scale relationships between niche breadth, range sizes and geographic exclusion along richness gradients of bats. Location: Eastern Mediterranean, Western Asia, and Central Asia. Taxon: Bats (Chiroptera). Methods: Based on a novel integrated species distribution modelling approach that combines occurrence information with expert range maps, we assessed how environmental niche breadth and range sizes varied with species richness. In addition, by contrasting species' potential and realised distributions in areas where species pairs overlap, we derived indicators of geographic exclusion to understand how potential interspecific competition is affecting range limits along richness gradients. Results and Main Conclusions: We found a nonlinear association between environmental niche breadth and richness, with the most specialised species occurring in species-poor regions and niche breadth peaking at intermediate richness. Despite a positive association of niche breadth and range sizes at the species level, range sizes in predicted bat communities declined continuously with species richness. In addition, patterns of geographic exclusion were linked to patterns of niche breadth, with species filling less of their potential range overlaps when overlapping species were more specialised. Our findings suggest that small range sizes in species-rich bat communities are better explained by the number of interacting species than by environmental specialisation or stronger exclusion between individual species. More broadly, we show how integrated distribution modelling approaches can shed new light on the interplay of species richness, specialisation and community structure, and caution against generalising relationships between richness and specialisation across taxa and geographies.

Orijinal dilİngilizce
Makale numarasıe15125
DergiJournal of Biogeography
Hacim52
Basın numarası6
DOI'lar
Yayın durumuYayınlandı - Haz 2025

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Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Journal of Biogeography published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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