Journal ArticleOpen Access
Southeast Asian primate communities: the effects of ecology and Pleistocene refuges on species richness
Author Affiliations
Swarthmore College, Stony Brook University, Peking University, International Union for Conservation of Nature (Bangladesh), ...
Published InIntegrative Zoology
Year2013
Citations17
Abstract
We examined historical and ecological factors affecting current primate biodiversity in Southeast Asia. In Africa, Madagascar and South America, but not Southeast Asia, primate species richness is positively associated with average rainfall and distance from the equator (latitude). We predicted that Southeast Asia's non-conformance may be due to the effect of dispersed Pleistocene refuges (locations of constricted tropical forests during glacial maxima which today are at least 305 m in altitude). Based on 45 forested sites (13 on large islands; 32 on the mainland) of at least 100 km(2) to minimize recent human impact, we determined correlations between extant primate species richness and rainfall, latitude and supplementary ecological variables, while controlling for refuges and islands. We found that refuge sites…
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