Assemblage Time Series Reveal Biodiversity
Change but Not Systematic Loss
Blog by: Kaitlyn Sullivan
Authors:
·
Marie Dornelas
“My research
focuses on quantifying biodiversity and understanding the processes that shape
it. I often work on tropical systems and specifically coral reefs, but I also
work with tropical freshwater fish, mangrove crabs and plants for example, as I
am more question-driven that organism-driven. I like to combine ecological
theory, synthesis of existing data, and fieldwork (preferably in exotic
places!) in my research, and most of the research questions I’m interested in
fall under the disciplines of community ecology, macroecology and biogeography.
I tend to work on intermediate spatio-temporal scales (that is communities and
networks of communities over time-scales of years to tens of years).”
·
Nicholas J. Gotelli
“My research addresses basic questions about
the organization of animal and plant communities. What are the forces that
determine the species composition and abundance of natural assemblages? How do
competition and predation affect local community structure? What are the biotic
and abiotic factors that control population growth and the risk of extinction?
Current research projects include enrichment and tipping points in aquatic
ecosystems, effects of climate change on ant assemblages of eastern deciduous
forests, and null model analyses of community structure and biodiversity.”
·
Brian McGill
“I study
questions pertaining to biodiversity at large scales – large areas of space,
long periods of time, many species. These questions have been deemphasized in
ecology due to the difficulty in doing experiments, but are of high relevance
to conservation and management questions. I have two broad research questions.
One is developing the ability to predict how species ranges will respond to
climate change. The other is finding ways to measure the impact of humans (especially
land cover change) on community structure.”
·
Hideyasu Shimadzu
“My general
research interest is in the science of data, Data Science. Data and models -
measurement and description of phenomena - they have been the foundation of
modern sciences. For the last several years my research activities lie on the
intersection of statistics and subject matter sciences, with a particular focus
on environmental/ecological sciences. My research concerns how statistical
consideration contributes to advancing our knowledge and understanding of
phenomena of interest.”
·
Faye Moyes
Is
currently a research assistant for the School of Biology at the University of
St. Andrews.
·
Caya Sievers
Is
currently a Seal Diet Technician for the School of Biology at the University of
St. Andrews.
·
Anne E. Magurran
Is currently
a Professor for the School of Biology at St. Andrews. “I am interested in the measurement,
evolution and conservation of biological diversity with particular emphasis on
freshwater fish assemblages and currently have projects in Brazil, Trinidad,
Mexico, India and Scotland.”
Summary
Losses or reductions in
biodiversity are likely the result of habitat destruction, pollution,
overharvesting, invasive species, as well as changes in climate. However, the degree to which changes in
biodiversity has occurred overtime is poorly understood. The main purpose of this paper is to address
“how diversity within assemblages is changing through time”. To better understand the extent to which
global biodiversity is impacted by changes in local biodiversity assemblages,
data collected between 1874 to present, consisting of 6.1 million species
occurrence records (35,613 species) from 100 individual time series from biomes
across the entire globe were analyzed. To
quantify patters of temporal diversity, α was used to measure changes in local
diversity, while β was used to measure changes in community composition.
Due to undeniable changes in
habitat and unusually high extinction rates, they hypothesized that “most
assemblages would exhibit a decrease in α (local) diversity through time. As for changes in community composition, they
hypothesized that because of “long-term changes in species composition, we
expect[ed] increasers in temporal β diversity”.
The results from the time
series collectively indicate no such systematic change in temporal α diversity
as was predicted. However, as for
temperate assemblages, the average trend in α diversity was positive, while the
trend tended to be negative at the global scale. The opposite is true of the trends regarding
temporal β diversity, which increased relative to the baseline sample “across
all climatic regions, realms, and taxonomic groups.” They addressed these finding by stating that
their “results suggest that local and regional assemblages are experiencing a
substitution of their taxa, rather than a systematic loss.”
I have no idea how to read or interpret figure 3.
ReplyDeleteI'm with Tanner on figure 3.
ReplyDeleteAlso, biotic homogenization - is that the increase in similarity of different locations over time as we discussed?
"Although homogenization may lead to a global loss of species, a diversity at local scales may stay constant or even increase as invaders replace residents and b diversity changes through time (11)." - Would current species just be substituted for then, meaning that number of species would stay the same but just replaced by different ones filling similar niches? Is "loss of species" then referring to current species at a point of time but not aloss in biodiversity in terms of number of species?