Are Alaskan Trees Found in Locally More Favourable Sites in Marginal Areas?

Aim: Species generally become rarer and more patchily distributed as the margins of their ranges are approached. We predicted that in such marginal sites, tree species would tend to occur where some key environmental factors are at particularly favourable levels, compensating in part for the low ove...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Global Ecology and Biogeography. - John Wiley & Sons Ltd. - 11(2002), 2, Seite 103-114
1. Verfasser: Lennon, Jack J. (VerfasserIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Kunin, William E., Corne, Simon, Carver, Steve
Format: Online-Aufsatz
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: 2002
Zugriff auf das übergeordnete Werk:Global Ecology and Biogeography
Schlagworte:Core Forest Habitat Selection Macroecology Range Margin Species Distributions Tree Distributions Physical sciences Biological sciences Behavioral sciences
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Aim: Species generally become rarer and more patchily distributed as the margins of their ranges are approached. We predicted that in such marginal sites, tree species would tend to occur where some key environmental factors are at particularly favourable levels, compensating in part for the low overall suitability of marginal sites. Location: The article considers the spatial distributions of trees in Southeast Alaska (the Alaskan 'panhandle'). Methods: We quantified range marginality using spatial distributions of eight tree species across more than one thousand surveyed sites in Southeast Alaska. For each species we derived a site core/margin index using a three-dimensional trend surface generated from logistic regression on site coordinates. For each species, the relationships between the environmental factors slope, aspect and site marginality were then compared for occupied and unoccupied sets of sites. Results: We found that site slope is important for more Alaskan tree species than aspect. Three out of eight had a significant core/margin by occupied/unoccupied interaction, tending to be present in significantly shallower-sloped (more favourable) sites in the marginal areas than the simple core/margin trend predicted. For site aspect, one species had a significant interaction, selecting potentially more favourable northerly aspects in marginal areas. A finer-scale analysis based on the same data came to the same overall conclusions. Conclusions: There is evidence that several tree species in Alaska tend to occur in especially favourable sites in marginal areas. In these marginal areas, these species amplify habitat preferences shown in core areas.
ISSN:14668238