Species reordering, not changes in richness, drives long-term dynamics in grassland communities

被引:60
|
作者
Jones, Sydney K. [1 ]
Ripplinger, Julie [2 ]
Collins, Scott L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ New Mexico, Dept Biol, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA
[2] Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Bot & Plant Sci, Riverside, CA 92521 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Community dynamics; desert grassland; desert shrubland; fire; species reordering; species richness; tallgrass prairie; NORTHERN CHIHUAHUAN DESERT; LOCAL BIODIVERSITY CHANGE; TEMPORAL DYNAMICS; TALLGRASS PRAIRIE; DIVERSITY; ECOSYSTEM; PRECIPITATION; DISTURBANCE; NITROGEN; FIRE;
D O I
10.1111/ele.12864
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Determining how ecological communities will respond to global environmental change remains a challenging research problem. Recent meta-analyses concluded that most communities are undergoing compositional change despite no net change in local species richness. We explored how species richness and composition of co-occurring plant, grasshopper, breeding bird and small mammal communities in arid and mesic grasslands changed in response to increasing aridity and fire frequency. In the arid system, grassland and shrubland plant and breeding bird communities were undergoing directional change, whereas grasshopper and small mammal communities were stable. In the mesic system, all communities were undergoing directional change regardless of fire frequency. Despite directional change in composition in some communities, species richness of all communities did not change because compositional change resulted more from reordering of species abundances than turnover in species composition. Thus, species reordering, not changes in richness, explains long-term dynamics in these grass and shrub dominated communities.
引用
收藏
页码:1556 / 1565
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Temporal Dynamics in Rhizosphere Bacterial Communities of Three Perennial Grassland Species
    Murphy, Cheryl A.
    Foster, Bryan L.
    Gao, Cuilan
    AGRONOMY-BASEL, 2016, 6 (01):
  • [22] Changes in Plant Species Richness Induce Functional Shifts in Soil Nematode Communities in Experimental Grassland
    Eisenhauer, Nico
    Migunova, Varvara D.
    Ackermann, Michael
    Ruess, Liliane
    Scheu, Stefan
    PLOS ONE, 2011, 6 (09):
  • [23] Dynamics of a mountain grassland: Environment predicts long-term trends, while species' traits predict short-term fluctuations
    Skalova, Hana
    Hadincova, Veroslava
    Krahulec, Frantisek
    Pechackova, Sylvie
    Herben, Tomas
    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2022, 33 (03)
  • [24] The effects of long-term nitrogen loading on grassland insect communities
    Haddad, NM
    Haarstad, J
    Tilman, D
    OECOLOGIA, 2000, 124 (01) : 73 - 84
  • [25] Intraspecific trait variation drives grassland species richness and productivity under changing precipitation
    Deng, Meifeng
    Liu, Weixing
    Li, Ping
    Jiang, Lin
    Li, Shaopeng
    Jia, Zhou
    Yang, Sen
    Guo, Lulu
    Wang, Zhenhua
    Liu, Lingli
    ECOSPHERE, 2021, 12 (08):
  • [26] Functional trait expression of grassland species shift with short- and long-term nutrient additions
    La Pierre, Kimberly J.
    Smith, Melinda D.
    PLANT ECOLOGY, 2015, 216 (02) : 307 - 318
  • [27] Long-term oscillations in grassland productivity induced by drought
    Haddad, NM
    Tilman, D
    Knops, JMH
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2002, 5 (01) : 110 - 120
  • [28] Soil fungal community changes in response to long-term fire cessation and N fertilization in tallgrass prairie
    Carson, Christine M.
    Jumpponen, Ari
    Blair, John M.
    Zeglin, Lydia H.
    FUNGAL ECOLOGY, 2019, 41 : 45 - 55
  • [29] As above, not so below: Long-term dynamics of net primary production across a dryland transition zone
    Brown, Renee F.
    Collins, Scott L.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2023, 29 (14) : 3941 - 3953
  • [30] Plant and soil fungal but not soil bacterial communities are linked in long-term fertilized grassland
    Cassman, Noriko A.
    Leite, Marcio F. A.
    Pan, Yao
    de Hollander, Mattias
    van Veen, Johannes A.
    Kuramae, Eiko E.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2016, 6