Naeem S, Prager Case, Weeks Brian, Varga Alex, Flynn Dan F B, Griffin Kevin, Muscarella Robert, Palmer Matthew, Wood Stephen, Schuster William
Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology, Columbia University, 1200 Amsterdam Avenue MC5557, New York, NY 10027, USA
Earth Institute Center for Environmental Studies, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2016 Dec 14;283(1844). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2015.3005.
Biodiversity is inherently multidimensional, encompassing taxonomic, functional, phylogenetic, genetic, landscape and many other elements of variability of life on the Earth. However, this fundamental principle of multidimensionality is rarely applied in research aimed at understanding biodiversity's value to ecosystem functions and the services they provide. This oversight means that our current understanding of the ecological and environmental consequences of biodiversity loss is limited primarily to what unidimensional studies have revealed. To address this issue, we review the literature, develop a conceptual framework for multidimensional biodiversity research based on this review and provide a case study to explore the framework. Our case study specifically examines how herbivory by whitetail deer (Odocoileus virginianus) alters the multidimensional influence of biodiversity on understory plant cover at Black Rock Forest, New York. Using three biodiversity dimensions (taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic diversity) to explore our framework, we found that herbivory alters biodiversity's multidimensional influence on plant cover; an effect not observable through a unidimensional approach. Although our review, framework and case study illustrate the advantages of multidimensional over unidimensional approaches, they also illustrate the statistical and empirical challenges such work entails. Meeting these challenges, however, where data and resources permit, will be important if we are to better understand and manage the consequences we face as biodiversity continues to decline in the foreseeable future.
生物多样性本质上是多维度的,涵盖了分类学、功能、系统发育、遗传、景观以及地球上生命变异的许多其他要素。然而,这一多维度的基本原则在旨在理解生物多样性对生态系统功能及其提供的服务的价值的研究中很少被应用。这种疏忽意味着我们目前对生物多样性丧失的生态和环境后果的理解主要局限于一维研究所揭示的内容。为了解决这个问题,我们回顾了文献,基于此回顾为多维度生物多样性研究制定了一个概念框架,并提供了一个案例研究来探索该框架。我们的案例研究具体考察了白尾鹿(弗吉尼亚鹿)的食草行为如何改变纽约黑岩森林中生物多样性对林下植物覆盖的多维度影响。利用三个生物多样性维度(分类学、功能和系统发育多样性)来探索我们的框架,我们发现食草行为改变了生物多样性对植物覆盖的多维度影响;这一效应通过一维方法是无法观察到的。尽管我们的回顾、框架和案例研究说明了多维度方法相对于一维方法的优势,但它们也说明了此类工作所带来的统计和实证挑战。然而,如果我们要在可预见的未来更好地理解和管理随着生物多样性持续下降而面临的后果,在数据和资源允许的情况下应对这些挑战将很重要。