Intermediate disturbance and patterns of species richness

被引:24
作者
Bendix, Jacob [1 ]
Wiley, John J., Jr. [2 ]
Commons, Michael G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Syracuse Univ, Dept Geog, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA
[2] SUNY Coll Environm Sci & Forestry, Dept Environm & Biol, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA
关键词
Intermediate disturbance hypothesis; biodiversity; disturbance history; unimodal response; contingency; TROPICAL RAIN-FORESTS; TREE DIVERSITY; HYPOTHESIS; PRODUCTIVITY; BIODIVERSITY; COEXISTENCE; MECHANISMS; CALIFORNIA; VEGETATION; LANDSCAPE;
D O I
10.1080/02723646.2017.1327269
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The intermediate disturbance hypothesis (IDH) predicts highest species diversity in environments experiencing intermediate intensity disturbance, after an intermediate timespan. Because many landscapes comprise mosaics with complex disturbance histories, the theory implies that each patch in those mosaics should have a distinct level of diversity reflecting the magnitude of disturbance and the time since it occurred. We model changing patterns of species richness across a landscape experiencing varied scenarios of simulated disturbance in order to predict first the variation of richness through time in individual patches, based on their disturbance histories, and then the changing patterns of richness across the landscape through time, representing the cumulative impact of changing richness within the individual patches. Model outputs show that individual landscape patches have highly variable species richness through time, with the trajectory reflecting the timing, intensity and sequence of disturbances. When the results are mapped across the landscape, the resulting temporal and spatial complexity reveals a distribution of biodiversity that is strikingly contingent on the details of disturbance history. These results illustrate the danger of generalization (in either data interpretation or management decisions), as IDH actually imposes a highly variable pattern of diversity.
引用
收藏
页码:393 / 403
页数:11
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]   Impact of a flood on southern California riparian vegetation [J].
Bendix, J .
PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, 1998, 19 (02) :162-174
[2]   Flood disturbance and the distribution of riparian species diversity [J].
Bendix, J .
GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW, 1997, 87 (04) :468-483
[3]   The intermediate disturbance hypothesis applies to tropical forests, but disturbance contributes little to tree diversity [J].
Bongers, Frans ;
Poorter, Lourens ;
Hawthorne, William D. ;
Sheil, Douglas .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2009, 12 (08) :798-805
[4]   Long-term, landscape patterns of past fire events in a montane ponderosa pine forest of central Colorado [J].
Brown, PM ;
Kaufmann, MR ;
Shepperd, WD .
LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 1999, 14 (06) :513-532
[5]   THE RESTORATION OF BIODIVERSITY: WHERE HAS RESEARCH BEEN AND WHERE DOES IT NEED TO GO? [J].
Brudvig, Lars A. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2011, 98 (03) :549-558
[6]   Competition-colonization trade-offs and disturbance effects at multiple scales [J].
Cadotte, Marc William .
ECOLOGY, 2007, 88 (04) :823-829
[7]   DISTURBANCE AND POPULATION-STRUCTURE ON THE SHIFTING MOSAIC LANDSCAPE [J].
CLARK, JS .
ECOLOGY, 1991, 72 (03) :1119-1137
[8]   EXPERIMENTAL-ANALYSIS OF INTERMEDIATE DISTURBANCE AND INITIAL FLORISTIC COMPOSITION - DECOUPLING CAUSE AND EFFECT [J].
COLLINS, SL ;
GLENN, SM ;
GIBSON, DJ .
ECOLOGY, 1995, 76 (02) :486-492
[10]   Neutral communities may lead to decreasing diversity-disturbance relationships: insights from a generic simulation model [J].
dos Santos, Francisca Ana Soares ;
Johst, Karin ;
Grimm, Volker .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2011, 14 (07) :653-660