Department of Biological Sciences, University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Hokkaido Research Center, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan.
Ecol Lett. 2021 May;24(5):1063-1072. doi: 10.1111/ele.13720. Epub 2021 Mar 14.
The last two decades have witnessed unprecedented changes in beta diversity, the spatial variation in species composition, from local to global scales. However, analytical challenges have hampered empirical ecologists from quantifying the extinction and colonisation processes behind these changing beta diversity patterns. Here, we develop a novel numerical method to additively partition the temporal changes in beta diversity into components that reflect local extinctions and colonisations. By applying this method to empirical datasets, we revealed spatiotemporal community dynamics that were otherwise undetectable. In mature forests, we found that local extinctions resulted in tree communities becoming more spatially heterogeneous, while colonisations simultaneously caused them to homogenise. In coral communities, we detected non-random community disassembly and reassembly following an environmental perturbation, with a temporally varying balance between extinctions and colonisations. Partitioning the dynamic processes that underlie beta diversity can provide more mechanistic insights into the spatiotemporal organisation of biodiversity.
在过去的二十年中,β多样性(物种组成的空间变化)发生了前所未有的变化,从局部到全球尺度都有所体现。然而,分析上的挑战使得经验生态学家无法量化这些变化的β多样性模式背后的灭绝和殖民过程。在这里,我们开发了一种新的数值方法,将β多样性的时间变化附加地划分为反映局部灭绝和殖民的组成部分。通过将这种方法应用于经验数据集,我们揭示了否则无法检测到的时空群落动态。在成熟的森林中,我们发现局部灭绝导致树木群落的空间异质性增加,而同时的殖民化又使它们均质化。在珊瑚群落中,我们检测到在环境扰动后群落的非随机解体和再组装,同时灭绝和殖民之间的平衡随时间而变化。对β多样性背后的动态过程进行划分,可以为生物多样性的时空组织提供更多的机制性见解。