Biogeography of body size in terrestrial isopods (Crustacea: Oniscidea)
Date
2016Source
Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary ResearchVolume
54Pages
182-188Google Scholar check
Keyword(s):
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study tries to unveil the contribution of climatic shift in shaping the extreme body size diversity in terrestrial isopods (Oniscidea). Trying to explain size variation at an interspecific level, we test five hypotheses: (1) Bergmann's Rule and the temperature-size rule postulate large size in cold areas (2) The metabolic cold adaptation theory postulates small animal sizes in cold environments (3) The primary productivity hypothesis predicts size increase in resource-rich areas (4) The aridity resistance hypothesis predicts large size in arid regions and (5). The acidosis hypothesis predicts smaller size with decreasing soil pH. Globally, Bergmann's rule and the aridity hypothesis are weakly supported. Among families and genera, results are variable and idiosyncratic. Conglobating species sizes provide weak support for the acidosis hypothesis. Overall, size is strongly affected by familial affiliation. Isopod size evolution seems to be mainly affected by phylogenetically constrained life-history traits. © 2016 Blackwell Verlag GmbH
Links
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84981513410&doi=10.1111%2fjzs.12125&partnerID=40&md5=10ab223dc894dadb25940de6f99e62e4https://nls.ldls.org.uk/welcome.html?ark:/81055/vdc_100034055648.0x000039