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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/140638

Title: Areas of endemism of Mexican terrestrial mammals: A case study using species’ ecological niche modeling, Parsimony Analysis of Endemicity and Goloboff fit
Authors: Escalante Espinosa, Tania
Linaje, M
Morrone, Juan José
SánchezCordero, V
Issue Date: 2007
Citation: Escalante, T., V. Sánchez-Cordero, J. J. Morrone & M. Linaje. 2007. Areas of endemism of Mexican terrestrial mammals: A case study using species’ ecological niche modeling, Parsimony Analysis of Endemicity and Goloboff fit. Interciencia, 32(3): 151-159
Abstract: Areas of endemism of Mexican terrestrial mammals using ecological niche modeling projected as species' potential distributions were identified to compare its performance with a previous analysis that used point occurrence data, and to incorporate Goloboff fit to Parsimony Analysis of Endemicity (PAE) for improving identification of areas of endemism. Six PAE were performed, combined or not, with Goloboff fit (k=0 and 2) using species' potential distributions of 429 terrestrial mammals overlaid on 248 by 232 quadrats of 1 degrees latitudelongitude countrywide. Consistency (CI) and retention (RI) indices were used for identifying endemic, characteristic, and possibly endemic species. Based on the strict consensus cladogram with k=0, seven areas of endemism defined by two or more species were identified: the Mexican Plateau, the Baja California Peninsula (with a nested pattern of endemism in the south and north), Chiapas (with a nested pattern of endemism in the south and north), the Mexican Pacific Coast, the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, the Sierra Madre Occidental, and the Yucatan Peninsula. PAE cladograms using species' potential distributions showed a better resolution than those produced using point occurrence data, showing consensus with fewer number of steps and higher number of synapomorphies. Goloboff fit (k) allowed individual downweighting of "noisy" species, thus increasing the number of synapomorphies in the cladograms, and even identifing more areas of endemism. Cladograms with k=0 had the largest number of synapomorphies, whereas k=2 allowed to obtain a smaller number of cladograms.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/140638
ISSN: 3781844
Appears in Collections:Departamento de Biología Evolutiva

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