Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.
Center for Watershed Sciences, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
Ecology. 2024 Apr;105(4):e4270. doi: 10.1002/ecy.4270. Epub 2024 Feb 28.
Spatial synchrony is the tendency for population fluctuations to be correlated among different locations. This phenomenon is a ubiquitous feature of population dynamics and is important for ecosystem stability, but several aspects of synchrony remain unresolved. In particular, the extent to which any particular mechanism, such as dispersal, contributes to observed synchrony in natural populations has been difficult to determine. To address this gap, we leveraged recent methodological improvements to determine how dispersal structures synchrony in giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera), a global marine foundation species that has served as a useful system for understanding synchrony. We quantified population synchrony and fecundity with satellite imagery across 11 years and 880 km of coastline in southern California, USA, and estimated propagule dispersal probabilities using a high-resolution ocean circulation model. Using matrix regression models that control for the influence of geographic distance, resources (seawater nitrate), and disturbance (destructive waves), we discovered that dispersal was an important driver of synchrony. Our findings were robust to assumptions about propagule mortality during dispersal and consistent between two metrics of dispersal: (1) the individual probability of dispersal and (2) estimates of demographic connectivity that incorporate fecundity (the number of propagules dispersing). We also found that dispersal and environmental conditions resulted in geographic clusters with distinct patterns of synchrony. This study is among the few to statistically associate synchrony with dispersal in a natural population and the first to do so in a marine organism. The synchronizing effects of dispersal and environmental conditions on foundation species, such as giant kelp, likely have cascading effects on the spatial stability of biodiversity and ecosystem function.
空间同步是指种群波动在不同地点之间相关的趋势。这种现象是种群动态的普遍特征,对生态系统稳定性很重要,但同步的几个方面仍未解决。特别是,任何特定机制(如扩散)在多大程度上有助于自然种群中观察到的同步性,这一直难以确定。为了解决这一差距,我们利用最近的方法学改进,来确定扩散结构在巨型海藻(Macrocystis pyrifera)中的同步作用,巨型海藻是一种全球性的海洋基础物种,它是理解同步性的有用系统。我们利用卫星图像,在美国加利福尼亚州南部的 11 年和 880 公里的海岸线上,量化了种群同步性和繁殖力,并使用高分辨率的海洋环流模型估计了繁殖体的扩散概率。使用矩阵回归模型来控制地理距离、资源(海水硝酸盐)和干扰(破坏性波浪)的影响,我们发现扩散是同步的重要驱动因素。我们的发现对于扩散过程中繁殖体死亡率的假设是稳健的,并且与两种扩散指标一致:(1)个体扩散概率和(2)包含繁殖力(扩散的繁殖体数量)的人口连通性估计。我们还发现,扩散和环境条件导致了具有不同同步模式的地理集群。这项研究是少数几项在自然种群中统计关联同步性与扩散的研究之一,也是第一项在海洋生物中进行的研究。扩散和环境条件对巨型海藻等基础物种的同步作用,可能对生物多样性和生态系统功能的空间稳定性产生级联效应。