4.7 Article

Latitudinal variation in the diversity-disturbance relationship demonstrates the context dependence of disturbance impacts

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 30, Issue 7, Pages 1389-1402

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/geb.13305

Keywords

alpha diversity; beta diversity; coexistence; community assembly; competition; diversity– disturbance relationships; intermediate disturbance hypothesis; latitude

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The shape of the diversity-disturbance relationship varies across different latitudes, with tropical communities showing increased richness and diversity with disturbance, while temperate communities experience a monotonic loss in species richness. Differences in species responses to disturbance drive compositional changes in tropical communities, while temperate communities shift towards algal dominance in high disturbance conditions.
Aim The shape of the diversity-disturbance relationship is context dependent, but the mechanisms driving this context dependence are unclear due to limited standardized empirical assessments across different environmental and ecological settings. At seven sites and over 20 degrees of latitude, spanning both temperate and tropical systems, we measured community response to a fine-scale experimental disturbance gradient in communities of benthic invertebrates. Location East coast of Australia (16.48-36.43 degrees S). Time period Sixty-six weeks (August 2012-November 2013). Major taxa studied Benthic marine invertebrates. Methods Communities were grown on acrylic tiles and subjected to four experimental disturbance events over a 66-week period. At the end of this period, the effect of increasing disturbance extent (from 0% to 100% community clearance) on measures of alpha and beta diversity were assessed. Results In the tropics, richness and diversity increased with disturbance because the creation of free space allowed for the colonization of new recruits. In temperate communities, increasing disturbance led to a monotonic loss in species richness and a more hump-shaped relationship in evenness and diversity. In the tropics, compositional change with increasing disturbance was driven by changes in species identities and abundances as the cover of rare species increased. In temperate regions, however, differences in species abundances were primarily responsible for compositional changes, reflecting the shift to algal dominance in conditions of high disturbance. Main conclusions The shape of the diversity-disturbance relationship changed over latitude, indicating that the concept of intermediate disturbance differs amongst these communities. Faster rates of increases in bare space, loss of species richness and a shift to algal dominance suggest that, in these systems, higher-latitude communities are more susceptible to negative outcomes of high levels of disturbance than lower-latitude communities. We discuss how differences in community dynamics, including competition, regional diversity and availability of propagules, help to explain this pattern.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available