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Why are there more
species in the
tropics than in the temperate regions of the globe? Many of the
world's species
live in the tropics (perhaps more than half), but the reason has been
debated
for more than 100 years. Many researchers
have
hypothesized that climatic factors somehow cause species to originate
more
quickly in tropical regions. In a paper appearing in the November issue
of The
American Naturalist, John Wiens and a group of researchers from The researchers
studied the
causes of high tropical species richness in tree frogs in the However, they did
find a strong
relationship between when each region was colonized and the number of
species
there today. Thus, the high species richness of tropical regions seems
to be
explained by the ancient origin of many groups in the tropics, more
recent
colonization of temperate regions, and by the inability of most
tropical
species to tolerate the variable temperatures of temperate areas. According to John
Wiens, the
study has important conservation implications: "If the pattern we see
in
tree frogs holds true for most other groups, then the tropics may have
more
ancient lineages and more genetic diversity per species than temperate
regions.
So there may be far more loss of diversity going on as we lose tropical
rainforests than would be suggested by the number of species alone."
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