Population synchrony decreases with richness and increases with environmental fluctuations in an experimental metacommunity

被引:14
|
作者
Pandit, Shubha N. [1 ]
Kolasa, Jurek [1 ]
Cottenie, Karl [2 ]
机构
[1] McMaster Univ, Dept Biol, Hamilton, ON L8S 4K1, Canada
[2] Univ Guelph, Dept Integrat Biol, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
Species richness; Population synchrony; Metacommunity; Environmental fluctuations; Cross-correlation function; Habitat specialization gradient; SPATIAL SYNCHRONY; DYNAMICS; STABILITY; PATTERNS; EXTINCTION; DISPERSAL; HABITAT;
D O I
10.1007/s00442-012-2407-8
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Fluctuations of local but connected populations may show correlation or synchrony whenever they experience significant dispersal or correlated environmental biotic and abiotic variability. Synchrony may be an important variable in multispecies systems, but its nature and implications have not been explicitly examined. Because the number of locally coexisting species (richness) affects the population variability of community members, we manipulated richness under different regimes of environmental fluctuation (EF). We predicted that the temporal synchrony of populations in a species should decline with increasing richness of the metacommunity they live in. Additionally, we predicted that specialist species that are sensitive to a specific environmental factor would show higher synchronization when EF increases. We thus created experimental communities with varied richness, EF, and species specialization to examine the synchronizing effects of these factors on three aquatic invertebrate species. We created four levels of richness and three levels of EF by manipulating the salinity of the culture media. Monocultures exhibited higher population synchrony than metacommunities of 2-4 species. Furthermore, we found that species responded differently to EF treatments: high EF enhanced population synchrony for the specialist and intermediate species, but not for the generalist species. Our findings emphasize that the magnitude of EF and species richness both contribute to determine population synchrony, and importantly, our results suggest that biotic diversity may actually stabilize metacommunities by disrupting synchrony.
引用
收藏
页码:237 / 247
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Population synchrony decreases with richness and increases with environmental fluctuations in an experimental metacommunity
    Shubha N. Pandit
    Jurek Kolasa
    Karl Cottenie
    Oecologia, 2013, 171 : 237 - 247
  • [2] Increases and decreases in network synchrony associated with local population extinction and recolonization
    Matter, Stephen F.
    ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2013, 266 : 68 - 72
  • [3] Occasional long distance dispersal increases spatial synchrony of population cycles
    Hopson, Jessica
    Fox, Jeremy W.
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, 2019, 88 (01) : 154 - 163
  • [4] Population synchrony and environmental variation: an experimental demonstration
    Benton, TG
    Lapsley, CT
    Beckerman, AP
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2001, 4 (03) : 236 - 243
  • [5] Chaos does not drive lower synchrony for intrinsically-induced population fluctuations
    Grosklos, Guenchik
    Zhao, Jia
    ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2023, 475
  • [6] Placing local plant species richness in the context of environmental drivers of metacommunity richness
    Stevens, MHH
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2006, 94 (01) : 58 - 65
  • [7] Population Fluctuations and Synchrony of Grassland Butterflies in Relation to Species Traits
    Franzen, Markus
    Nilsson, Sven G.
    Johansson, Victor
    Ranius, Thomas
    PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (10):
  • [8] Population fluctuations and spatial synchrony in an arboreal rodent
    Selonen, Vesa
    Remm, Jaanus
    Hanski, Ilpo K.
    Henttonen, Heikki
    Huitu, Otso
    Jokinen, Maarit
    Korpimaki, Erkki
    Makela, Antero
    Sulkava, Risto
    Wistbacka, Ralf
    OECOLOGIA, 2019, 191 (04) : 861 - 871
  • [9] The effect of harvesting on the spatial synchrony of population fluctuations
    Engen, Steinar
    Cao, Francisco J.
    Saether, Bernt-Erik
    THEORETICAL POPULATION BIOLOGY, 2018, 123 : 28 - 34
  • [10] Dispersal Increases Spatial Synchrony of Populations but Has Weak Effects on Population Variability: A Meta-analysis
    Yang, Qi
    Hong, Pubin
    Luo, Mingyu
    Jiang, Lin
    Wang, Shaopeng
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2022, 200 (04) : 544 - 555