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Ecology - 2022 - Blowes - Local biodiversity change reflects interactions among changing abundance evenness and richness.pdf (1.45 MB)

Local biodiversity change reflects interactions among changing abundance, evenness, and richness

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posted on 2022-12-09, 16:09 authored by Shane A Blowes, Gergana N Daskalova, Maria Dornelas, Thore Engel, Nicholas J Gotelli, Anne E Magurran, Inês S Martins, Brian McGill, Daniel J McGlinn, Alban Sagouis, Hideyasu Shimadzu, Sarah R Supp, Jonathan M Chase

Biodiversity metrics often integrate data on the presence and abundance of multiple species. Yet understanding covariation of changes to the numbers of individuals, the evenness of species relative abundances, and the total number of species remains limited. Using individual-based rarefaction curves, we introduce a conceptual framework to understand how expected positive relationships among changes in abundance, evenness and richness arise, and how they can break down. We then examined interdependencies between changes in abundance, evenness and richness in more than 1100 assemblages sampled either through time or across space. As predicted, richness changes were greatest when abundance and evenness changed in the same direction, and countervailing changes in abundance and evenness acted to constrain the magnitude of changes in species richness. Site-to-site differences in abundance, evenness, and richness were often decoupled, and pairwise relationships between spatial variation in these components across assemblages were weak. In contrast, changes in species richness and relative abundance were strongly correlated for assemblages varying through time. Temporal changes in local biodiversity showed greater inertia and stronger relationships between the component changes when compared to site-to-site variation. Overall, local variation in assemblage diversity was rarely due to a passive sample from a more or less static species abundance distribution. Instead, changing species relative abundances often dominated local variation in diversity. Moreover, how changing relative abundances combined with changes to total abundance frequently determined the magnitude of richness changes. Embracing the interdependencies between changing abundance, evenness and richness can provide new information for better understanding biodiversity change in the Anthropocene.

Funding

German Research Foundation (FZT 118)

History

School

  • Science

Department

  • Mathematical Sciences

Published in

Ecology

Volume

103

Issue

12

Publisher

Wiley

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Authors

Publisher statement

This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Wiley under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Acceptance date

2022-06-02

Publication date

2022-09-29

Copyright date

2022

ISSN

0012-9658

eISSN

1939-9170

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Hideyasu Shimadzu. Deposit date: 12 June 2022

Article number

e3820

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