4.7 Article

Long-term trends in gastropod abundance and biodiversity: Disentangling effects of press versus pulse disturbances

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 31, Issue 2, Pages 247-265

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/geb.13425

Keywords

biodiversity; climate change; extreme events; global warming; hurricane-induced disturbance; resilience; succession; tropics

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [BSR-8811902, DEB-9411973, DEB-0080538, DEB-0218039, DEB-0620910, DEB-1239764, DEB-1546686, DEB-1831952]
  2. United States Forest Service
  3. OPUS grant from NSF [DEB-1950643]
  4. University of Puerto Rico

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The study found that over the past 30 years, the impact on tropical gastropods in the Luquillo Mountains was primarily from hurricanes and associated secondary succession, rather than global warming. Gastropods demonstrate high resilience in this tropical ecosystem.
Aim Climate-induced pulse (e.g., hurricanes) and press (e.g., global warming) disturbances represent threats to populations, communities, and the ecosystem services that they provide. We leveraged three decades of annual data on tropical gastropods to quantify the effects of major hurricanes, associated secondary succession, and global warming on abundance, biodiversity, and species composition. Location Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico. Methods Gastropod abundance, biodiversity, and composition were estimated annually for each of 27 years in a tropical montane forest that experienced three major hurricanes (Hugo, Georges, and Maria). Generalized linear mixed-effects, linear mixed-effects, and linear models evaluated population- and community-level responses to year, ambient temperature, understorey temperature, hurricane, and time since hurricane. Variation partitioning determined the unique and shared variation in biotic responses associated with temperature, disturbance, and succession. Results Rather than declining, gastropod abundances generally increased through time, whereas the responses of biodiversity were weak and scale dependent. Hurricanes and associated secondary succession, rather than ambient atmospheric temperature, moulded long-term trends in abundances and biodiversity. Main conclusions Global warming over the past 30 years has not progressed sufficiently to elicit significant responses by gastropods in the Luquillo Mountains. Rather, effects from pulse disturbances (i.e., hurricanes) and secondary succession currently drive long-term variation in abundance and biodiversity. Gastropods evince high resilience in this tropical ecosystem. Historical exposure to recurrent hurricanes likely imbued the fauna with broad niches that make them resistant to current levels of global warming. We predict that biotic resiliency will be challenged once changes in temperature exceed interannual and inter-habitat differences that typify this hurricane-mediated system, or combine with an increased frequency of hurricanes and droughts to alter associations among environmental characteristics that define the fundamental niches of species. Only then might significant declines in abundance or the appearance of novel communities characterize the gastropod fauna in the Luquillo Mountains.

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