Within a few years of the publishing of the theory, its potential application to the field of
conservation biology had been realised and was being vigorously debated in
ecological circles. The idea that reserves and
national parks formed islands inside human-altered landscapes (
habitat fragmentation), and that these reserves could lose species as they 'relaxed towards equilibrium' (that is they would lose species as they achieved their new equilibrium number, known as ecosystem decay) caused a great deal of concern. This is particularly true when conserving larger species which tend to have larger ranges. A study by William Newmark, published in the journal
Nature and reported in
The New York Times, showed a strong
correlation between the size of a protected
U.S. National Park and the number of species of mammals. This led to the debate known as
single large or several small (SLOSS), described by writer
David Quammen in
The Song of the Dodo as "ecology's own genteel version of trench warfare". In the years after the publication of Wilson and Simberloff's papers ecologists had found more examples of the species-area relationship, and conservation planning was taking the view that the one large reserve could hold more species than several smaller reserves, and that larger reserves should be the norm in
reserve design. This view was in particular championed by
Jared Diamond. This led to concern by other ecologists, including Dan Simberloff, who considered this to be an unproven over-simplification that would damage conservation efforts. Habitat diversity was as or more important than size in determining the number of species protected. Island biogeography theory also led to the development of
wildlife corridors as a conservation tool to increase connectivity between habitat islands. Wildlife corridors can increase the movement of species between parks and reserves and therefore increase the number of species that can be supported, but they can also allow for the spread of disease and pathogens between populations, complicating the simple proscription of connectivity being good for biodiversity. In species diversity, island biogeography most describes
allopatric speciation. Allopatric speciation is where new gene pools arise out of natural selection in isolated gene pools. Island biogeography is also useful in considering
sympatric speciation, the idea of different species arising from one ancestral species in the same area. Interbreeding between the two differently adapted species would prevent speciation, but in some species, sympatric speciation appears to have occurred. Island ecosystems are typically shaped by a set of ecological limitations—such as lower environmental heterogeneity, restricted availability of resources, and a lack (or very low abundance) of predators or competing species. These conditions can drive phenotypic shifts in insular populations, arising as adaptive responses to environmental pressures that differ from those experienced within the species' original realised niche. == See also ==