4.7 Article

Energetic compensation is historically contingent and not supported for small mammals in South American or Asian deserts

期刊

ECOLOGY
卷 96, 期 6, 页码 1702-1712

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/14-1569.1

关键词

community ecology; degu; deserts; energetic compensation; functional redundancy; historical contingency; north-central Chile; Octodon degus; species coexistence; species redundancy; trophic strategy; zero-sum dynamics

类别

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB-0948583, DEB-0947224]
  2. Chilean CONICYT [FONDECYT 1110228]
  3. Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity
  4. University of California-Davis
  5. Northern Illinois University
  6. Universidad de La Serena
  7. Chile's National Forest and Park Service (CONAF) and Agriculture Service (SAG)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Understanding the nature of faunal assembly and community structure remains central to ecology. Research in North American deserts and some tropical forests provides evidence of energetic compensation and zero-sum dynamics, suggesting that species in some natural assemblages may be replaced with limited impact on ecosystem function. Experimental removal of a dominant small mammal (degu, Octodon degus) from replicate plots in semiarid coastal thorn-scrub habitat in north-central Chile revealed no evidence for energetic or functional compensation; energy consumption remained significantly lower on degu exclusions relative to control plots after 17 years of exclusion. This occurred in spite of the fact that the geographic species pools for South American sites generally are similar in size to those of most North American sites (mean and median number of species, 16.3 and 21.5 vs. 21.0 and 20, respectively). A macroecological assessment of energetically equivalent species at 394 arid sites in North America, the Gobi Desert, and South America indicated that the number of potentially equivalent species was lower than (Gobi) or similar to (South America) that found in North America, but when segregated by trophic groups, these faunas differed markedly. North American sites included large numbers of granivorous species whereas South American sites were dominated by omnivores. The more general trophic strategy in the latter sites would be expected to facilitate compensatory responses within local faunas, suggesting either that our site is anomalous or that other factors are governing local dynamics. Further research is needed to understand the generality of compensatory dynamics within natural systems, as this mechanism has direct relevance to discussions on ecological resilience in the face of ongoing environmental change.

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