4.7 Article

Towards a unified framework to study causality in Earth-life systems

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 22, Pages 5628-5642

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16142

Keywords

causal theory; diversification; Earth-life science; evolution; macroecology; theory

Funding

  1. NSF-EAR award [1925535]

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The article explores the causal relationships between earth processes and the distribution of life on Earth. By using causal structures to depict these relationships, a deeper understanding can be gained on how landscape features shape biology.
There is considerable interest in better understanding how earth processes shape the generation and distribution of life on Earth. This question, at its heart, is one of causation. In this article I propose that at a regional level, earth processes can be thought of as behaving somewhat deterministically and may have an organized effect on the diversification and distribution of species. However, the study of how landscape features shape biology is challenged by pseudocongruent or collinear variables. I demonstrate that causal structures can be used to depict the cause-effect relationships between earth processes and biological patterns using recent examples from the literature about speciation and species richness in montane settings. This application shows that causal diagrams can be used to better decipher the details of causal relationships by motivating new hypotheses. Additionally, the abstraction of this knowledge into structural equation metamodels can be used to formulate theory about relationships within Earth-life systems more broadly. Causal structures are a natural point of collaboration between biologists and Earth scientists, and their use can mitigate against the risk of misassigning causality within studies. My goal is that by applying causal theory through application of causal structures, we can build a systems-level understanding of what landscape features or earth processes most shape the distribution and diversification of species, what types of organisms are most affected, and why.

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