TY - JOUR
T1 - Re-structuring of marine communities exposed to environmental change
T2 - A global study on the interactive effects of species and functional richness
AU - Wahl, Martin
AU - Link, Heike
AU - Alexandridis, Nicolaos
AU - Thomason, Jeremy C.
AU - Cifuentes, Mauricio
AU - Costello, Mark J.
AU - da Gama, Bernardo A.P.
AU - Hillock, Kristina
AU - Hobday, Alistair J.
AU - Kaufmann, Manfred J.
AU - Keller, Stefanie
AU - Kraufvelin, Patrik
AU - Krüger, Ina
AU - Lauterbach, Lars
AU - Antunes, Bruno L.
AU - Molis, Markus
AU - Nakaoka, Masahiro
AU - Nyström, Julia
AU - bin Radzi, Zulkamal
AU - Stockhausen, Björn
AU - Thiel, Martin
AU - Vance, Thomas
AU - Weseloh, Annika
AU - Whittle, Mark
AU - Wiesmann, Lisa
AU - Wunderer, Laura
AU - Yamakita, Takehisa
AU - Lenz, Mark
PY - 2011/5/24
Y1 - 2011/5/24
N2 - Species richness is the most commonly used but controversial biodiversity metric in studies on aspects of community stability such as structural composition or productivity. The apparent ambiguity of theoretical and experimental findings may in part be due to experimental shortcomings and/or heterogeneity of scales and methods in earlier studies. This has led to an urgent call for improved and more realistic experiments. In a series of experiments replicated at a global scale we translocated several hundred marine hard bottom communities to new environments simulating a rapid but moderate environmental change. Subsequently, we measured their rate of compositional change (re-structuring) which in the great majority of cases represented a compositional convergence towards local communities. Re-structuring is driven by mortality of community components (original species) and establishment of new species in the changed environmental context. The rate of this re-structuring was then related to various system properties. We show that availability of free substratum relates negatively while taxon richness relates positively to structural persistence (i.e., no or slow re-structuring). Thus, when faced with environmental change, taxon-rich communities retain their original composition longer than taxon-poor communities. The effect of taxon richness, however, interacts with another aspect of diversity, functional richness. Indeed, taxon richness relates positively to persistence in functionally depauperate communities, but not in functionally diverse communities. The interaction between taxonomic and functional diversity with regard to the behaviour of communities exposed to environmental stress may help understand some of the seemingly contrasting findings of past research.
AB - Species richness is the most commonly used but controversial biodiversity metric in studies on aspects of community stability such as structural composition or productivity. The apparent ambiguity of theoretical and experimental findings may in part be due to experimental shortcomings and/or heterogeneity of scales and methods in earlier studies. This has led to an urgent call for improved and more realistic experiments. In a series of experiments replicated at a global scale we translocated several hundred marine hard bottom communities to new environments simulating a rapid but moderate environmental change. Subsequently, we measured their rate of compositional change (re-structuring) which in the great majority of cases represented a compositional convergence towards local communities. Re-structuring is driven by mortality of community components (original species) and establishment of new species in the changed environmental context. The rate of this re-structuring was then related to various system properties. We show that availability of free substratum relates negatively while taxon richness relates positively to structural persistence (i.e., no or slow re-structuring). Thus, when faced with environmental change, taxon-rich communities retain their original composition longer than taxon-poor communities. The effect of taxon richness, however, interacts with another aspect of diversity, functional richness. Indeed, taxon richness relates positively to persistence in functionally depauperate communities, but not in functionally diverse communities. The interaction between taxonomic and functional diversity with regard to the behaviour of communities exposed to environmental stress may help understand some of the seemingly contrasting findings of past research.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79956211152&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0019514
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0019514
M3 - Article
C2 - 21611170
AN - SCOPUS:79956211152
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 6
JO - PLoS ONE
JF - PLoS ONE
IS - 5
M1 - e19514
ER -