GEOG 235. Biogeography

ZOOGEOGRAPHIC PROVINCES

Zoogeographic provinces are regions of distinctive fauna. They are based on the taxonomic or phylogenetic relationships of animals and not the adaptations of animals to specific environments. One way of looking at this is to think of the fauna of each province as constituting the gene pool available to the forces of natural selection to adapt animal life to the variety of habitats present in the particular region. The gene pool (i.e, the taxa represented) is different in each province.

As for any region in geography, a province maintains a level of homogeniety within its borders and clearly differs from adjacent areas. The boundaries between zoogeographic provinces are drawn according to the distribution of vertebrate taxa (in particular, families). Sclater, who is commonly acknowledged as the developer of this system of drawing regions according to fauna, based his regions on the taxonomic relationships of birds; but the same regional limits work well enough for fishes, amphibians, reptiles, and mammals. The exact locations of boundaries are problematic. For example, the boundary between the Oriental and Australian provinces has been redrawn several times; the most famous rendition is known as Wallace's Line, which falls between Borneo and Sulawesi and between the tiny islands of Bali and Lompoc. The latter pair of islands are separated by a mere 20 miles, but for the most part they are inhabited by different families of mammals and even birds.

Look at the map of zoogeographic provinces. With what physical features of the earth do the borders coincide?

(When the world is subdivided into regions according to the distribution of plant taxa, the resulting regions, known as Floristic Kingdoms, do not coincide with zoogeographic regions. What factors could account for the differences in the distribution patterns of vertebrates and (flowering) plants?)


Synopsis of Zoogeographic Regions as they pertain to mammals

Below are some comparative data for the six zoogeographic regions. The total number of families and the number of endemic families pertain to all mammals, except bats. The number of families shared refers to those families found only in the respective two zoogeographic regions and excludes more widespread families like, for example, the Canidae, which have reached all continents except Antarctica (although entry into Australia is generally considered a result of its introduction by people and not natural dispersal processes).

PALEARCTIC ZOOGEOGRAPHIC PROVINCE

NEARCTIC ZOOGEOGRAPHIC PROVINCE NEOTROPICAL ZOOGEOGRAPHIC PROVINCE ETHIOPIAN ZOOGEOGRAPHIC PROVINCE ORIENTAL ZOOGEOGRAPHIC PROVINCE AUSTRALIAN ZOOGEOGRAPHIC PROVINCE [Source: Darlington, 1957. Zoogeography.]

Zoogeographic Provinces Exercise

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Created by Susan Woodward, August 15, 1997. Last updated 8/16/97 by SLW.