4.4 Article

Rivers as islands: determinants of the distribution of Andean astroblepid catfishes

Journal

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY
Volume 77, Issue 10, Pages 2373-2390

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2010.02822.x

Keywords

ecological niche modelling; elevation; fresh water; Maxent; temperature

Funding

  1. AMNH
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB 0314849]

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The distribution of astroblepids was examined using predictive niche modelling techniques to explore the physical and environmental factors responsible for determining the limits to their geographic distribution in the tropical Andes. Astroblepids occur in streams across a wide range of elevations (100-4600 m) and ecosystems from Panama to Bolivia, with most occurrences between 500 and 2000 m and associated with a narrow range of mean temperatures (17-24 degrees C). The Maxent-predicted distribution was 83% accurate, statistically significant (AUC = 0 center dot 965), and closely matched the known distribution, with few notable exceptions. Four environmental variables contributed a cumulative 84% to the prediction, with elevation the most important, followed by temperature seasonality, isothermality and maximum temperature of the warmest month. The greatest discrepancy between the predicted and known distributions involved areas of predicted habitat suitability where there are no associated occurrence records. A jackknife test of variable contribution to the model showed that elevation contributed to the predicted distribution in ways not simply accounted for by temperature. Contrary to expectations, land cover type and vegetation characteristics contributed relatively little to the model prediction.

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