4.6 Review

Biotic homogenization and differentiation of plant communities in tropical and subtropical forests

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.14025

Keywords

anthropogenic disturbances; beta diversity; biodiversity erosion; community change; scale dependency

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Anthropogenic impacts on biodiversity can result in biotic homogenization and biotic differentiation. This study conducted a systematic review of plant communities in tropical and subtropical forests to identify trends and knowledge gaps in biotic homogenization and differentiation. The results showed that homogenization was more frequent than differentiation, and most studies assessed these processes based on a single observation in time. Forest fragmentation was identified as the main determinant of homogenization and differentiation.
Anthropogenic impacts on biodiversity can lead to biotic homogenization (BH) and biotic differentiation (BD). BH is a process of increasing similarity in community composition (including taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic components), whereas BD is a process of decreasing similarity over space and time. Here, we conducted a systematic review of BH and BD in plant communities in tropical and subtropical forests to identify trends and knowledge gaps. Our bibliometric search in the Web of Science returned 1989 papers, of which 151 matched our criteria and were included in the analysis. The Neotropical region had the largest number of articles, and Brazil was the most represented country with 92 studies. Regarding the type of change, homogenization was more frequent than differentiation (noted in 69.6% of publications). The taxonomic diversity component was measured more often than functional and phylogenetic diversity components. Most studies (75.6%) assessed homogenization and differentiation based on a single observation in time; as opposed to few studies that monitored plant community over multiple years. Forest fragmentation was cited as the main determinant of homogenization and differentiation processes (57.2% of articles). Our results highlight the importance of evaluating community composition over time and more than taxonomic components (i.e., functional and phylogenetic) to advance understanding of homogenization and differentiation. Both processes were scale dependent and not mutually exclusive. As such, future research should consider differentiation as a potential transition phase to homogenization and that potential differences in both processes may depend on the spatial and temporal scale adopted. Understanding the complexity and causes of homogenization and differentiation is essential for biodiversity conservation in a world increasingly affected by anthropogenic disturbances.

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