Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49602
Title: Phytogeography of Lusitanian Macaronesia: Biogeographic affinities in species richness and assemblage composition
Authors: Tuya, Fernando 
Haroun, Ricardo J. 
UNESCO Clasification: 241705 Biología marina
250501 Biogeografía
Keywords: Algae
Assemblage
Composition
Biogeography
Diversity, et al
Issue Date: 2009
Publisher: 0967-0262
Journal: European Journal of Phycology 
Abstract: Analysis of biogeographic affinities is a key tool to establish and improve the resolution of hierarchical biogeographic systems. We describe patterns of species richness of the marine macroalgal flora across Lusitanian Macaronesia (Azores, Madeira, the Salvage Islands and the Canary Islands), and test (i) whether such differences are related to differences in proximity to the nearest continental shore and size among islands. We also explore biogeographic affinities in the composition of macroalgal assemblages (= presence/absence of each taxon in multivariate datasets) to determine (ii) whether each archipelago is a biogeographic unit within this ecoregion and (iii) whether patterns in assemblage composition are related to proximity (i.e. distances) among islands. Presence/absence matrices were created to test and visualize multivariate affinities among archipelagos. A total of 872 taxa were compiled. Species richness peaked at the Canary Islands and decreased towards the Azores; the pattern matched a progressive increase in distance from the nearest continental shores, matching the classical island biogeography theory. Intra-archipelago differences in species richness were largely related to variations in island size. Biogeographic similarities among archipelagos were hierarchically structured. Madeira and the Salvage Islands constituted one biogeographic unit. Floras from the Azores, Madeira and the Salvage Islands were barely separable from each other, but were different from those at the Canary Islands. Such biogeographic similarities among islands were negatively correlated with the geographical separation (i.e. distances) among them. Proximity to nearby continental shores, in conjunction with large- and meso-scale oceanographic patterns, seems to interact to create patterns in richness and composition of algal assemblages across Lusitanian Macaronesia.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49602
ISSN: 0967-0262
DOI: 10.1080/09670260902836246
Source: European Journal Of Phycology [ISSN 0967-0262], v. 44 (3), p. 405-413
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