Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
(1986), 28:65-82. With 4 figures.
Accepted 14 February 1986
Nested subsets and the structure of insular
mammalian faunas and archipelagos
Bruce D. Patterson & Wirt Atmar
Abstract : The nested subset hypothesis was formulated to describe and explain patterns in the community
structure of insular mammal faunas which are in the state of ‘relaxation’. The hypothesis states that
the species comprising a depauperate fauna should constitute a proper subset of those in richer
faunas, and that an archipelago of such faunas arranged by species richness should present a nested
series. The non-randomness of this pattern is evaluated for montane mammals in the American
Southwest using Monte Carlo simulations under two sets of conditions. First, we constructed model
archipelagos with the observed distribution of species richnesses, drawing individual species at
random (without replacement) from the species pool (RANDOM0). Secondly, we constructed
model archipelagos having the observed distribution of species richnesses, but weighted the selection
of species by their actual frequencies of occurrence (RANDOM1). The degree of nestedness in the
model archipelagos was then used to assess the non-randomness of the observed structure. Actual
Southwestern mammal faunas have a far more nested structure than model archipelagos produced
by either RANDOM0 or RANDOM1, and there is virtually zero probability that observed
structure is represented in the distribution of scores from either simulation run. Similar analyses
were conducted on other archipelagos to determine the generality of this relationship and to
identify variables putatively responsible for its production. Mammal faunas of large islands off the
coast of Maine, U.S.A., studied by Crowell (1986) also comprise nested subsets, as do those
inhabiting islands off the coast of Baja California, Mexico, studied by Lawlor (1983). Significantly,
when the Baja archipelago is divided into landbridge islands (which are presumed to be relaxing to
lower species level) and oceanic islands (where species number is limited by successful overwater
dispersal), only the former show significant nestedness under the more stringent conditions of
RANDOM1. These results and theoretical considerations suggest that selective extinction of species
may be chiefly responsible for the nestedness in natural archipelagos. Our conclusions have obvious
implications for the design of natural preserves (e.g. SLOSS): several small fragments of a single
biota can be expected to support nested subsets of the species originally present or that would likely
be retained in a single large preserve. Even more sobering are arguments raised which suggest that
the faunas of preserves established in different habitats within the same biome might be expected to
converge in composition via selective extinction.
KEY WORDS:-Extinction - nested subsets - biogeography - archipelago - faunas - simulation -
montane mammals - American Southwest.
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