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A framework for disentangling ecological mechanisms . . . Abstract: The relationship between an island’s size and the number of species on that island—the island species-area relationship (ISAR)—is one of the most well-known patterns in biogeography, and forms the basis for understanding biodiversity loss in response to habitat loss and fragmentation
Shrubland ecosystem genetics and biodiversity: proceedings In this article, the theory of island biogeography is examined in reference to island environments, including topographic origins and charac-teristics, as well as climatic patterns
UC Merced - Texas A M University The island species–area relationship (ISAR) —depicting Here, we find that S increases with island size but how the numbers of species increase with the size
The species–area relationship: new challenges for an old pattern Traditionally, the species–area relationship describes the very general tendency for species number to increase with island area; a relationship whose slope declines (but remains positive) as area increases
IslandBiog - University of Wisconsin–Madison 1 Species-area relationships Relationship within archipelagos between the sizes of individual islands and the number of species that comprise their biota This general relationship (although with different ratios) was later seen with flowering plants and birds in the Pacific
Recent and Rapid Assembly of an Island Species–Area . . . The island species–area relationship (ISAR) describes how larger islands support more species ISARs of isolated oceanic archi-pelagos, assembled over millions of years, typically show positive relationships, steep slopes, and species richness equilibrium