4.6 Article

Latitudinal variation in long-term stability of North American rocky intertidal communities

期刊

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
卷 90, 期 9, 页码 2077-2093

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13504

关键词

community stability; foundation species; global change ecology; long‐ term monitoring; mussels; Mytilus californianus; temperate rocky intertidal

资金

  1. David and Lucille Packard Foundation
  2. U.S. Department of the Interior Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
  3. National Park Service
  4. California Ocean Protection Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study examines the long-term stability of rocky intertidal communities along the west coast of North America using a multivariate similarity approach. It found an inverse relationship between community stability and elevated water temperatures, with lower stability in the south region. Community stability was linked to high species richness and low evenness at the site level.
Although long-term ecological stability is often discussed as a community attribute, it is typically investigated at the species level (e.g. density, biomass), or as a univariate metric (e.g. species diversity). To provide a more comprehensive assessment of long-term community stability, we used a multivariate similarity approach that included all species and their relative abundances. We used data from 74 sites sampled annually from 2006 to 2017 to examine broad temporal and spatial patterns of change within rocky intertidal communities along the west coast of North America. We explored relationships between community change (inverse of stability) and the following potential drivers of change/stability: (a) marine heatwave events; (b) three attributes of biodiversity: richness, diversity and evenness and (c) presence of the mussel, Mytilus californianus, a dominant space holder and foundation species in this system. At a broad scale, we found an inverse relationship between community stability and elevated water temperatures. In addition, we found substantial differences in stability among regions, with lower stability in the south, which may provide a glimpse into the patterns expected with a changing climate. At the site level, community stability was linked to high species richness and, perhaps counterintuitively, to low evenness, which could be a consequence of the dominance of mussels in this system. Synthesis. Assessments of long-term stability at the whole-community level are rarely done but are key to a comprehensive understanding of the impacts of climate change. In communities structured around a spatially dominant species, long-term stability can be linked to the stability of this 'foundation species', as well as to traditional predictors, such as species richness.

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