Bioclimatic context of species' populations determines community stability
Evans, Luke Christopher; Melero, Yolanda; Schmucki, Reto ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3064-7553; Boersch‐Supan, Philipp H.; Brotons, Lluís; Fontaine, Colin; Jiguet, Frédéric; Kuussaari, Mikko; Massimino, Dario; Robinson, Robert A.; Roy, David B. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5147-0331; Schweiger, Oliver; Settele, Josef; Stefanescu, Constanti; Turnhout, Chris A.M.; Oliver, Tom Henry. 2022 Bioclimatic context of species' populations determines community stability. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 31 (8). 1542-1555. 10.1111/geb.13527
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Abstract/Summary
Aim: It is important to understand the factors affecting community stability because ecosystem function is increasingly at risk from biodiversity loss. Here, we evaluate how a key factor, the position of local environmental conditions within the thermal range of the species, influences the stability of butterfly communities at a continental scale. Location: Spain, UK and Finland. Time period: 1999–2017. Major taxa studied: Butterflies. Methods: We tested the following hypotheses about how species responses to temperature anomalies aggregate to influence stability: Hypothesis 1, species have contrasting responses to local temperature anomalies at opposing edges of their thermal range; hypothesis 2, communities with central thermal range positions have higher community stability; and the impacts of thermal range position on community stability are driven by hypothesis 3, population asynchrony, or hypothesis 4, additive population stability. Data were analysed at 876 sites for 157 species. Results: We found some support for hypothesis 1, because there were interactions between thermal range and response to temperature anomalies such that species at different range edges could provide weak compensatory dynamics. However, responses were nonlinear, suggesting strong declines with extreme anomalies, particularly at the hot range edge. Hypothesis 2 was supported in part, because community stability increased with central thermal range positions and declined at the edges, after accounting for species richness and community abundance. Thermal range position was weakly correlated with asynchrony (hypothesis 3) and population stability (hypothesis 4), although species richness and population abundance had larger impacts. Main conclusions: Future extreme heat events will be likely to impact species negatively across their thermal range, but might be particularly impactful on populations at the hottest end of the thermal range. Thermal range position influenced community stability because range edge communities were stable. However, the prediction of community stability from thermal range position is challenging because of nonlinear responses to temperature, with small temperature anomalies producing weak compensatory dynamics, but large extreme events synchronizing dynamics.
Item Type: | Publication - Article |
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Digital Object Identifier (DOI): | 10.1111/geb.13527 |
UKCEH and CEH Sections/Science Areas: | Biodiversity (Science Area 2017-) |
ISSN: | 1466-822X |
Additional Information. Not used in RCUK Gateway to Research.: | Open Access paper - full text available via Official URL link. |
Additional Keywords: | asynchrony, biodiversity, biogeography, community stability, diversity–stability, insects, integrated Laplace approximation, long-term monitoring, range position |
NORA Subject Terms: | Ecology and Environment |
Date made live: | 08 Jun 2022 13:40 +0 (UTC) |
URI: | https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/532687 |
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