Maintenance of community function through compensation breaks down over time in a desert rodent community

被引:6
作者
Diaz, Renata M. [1 ]
Ernest, S. K. Morgan [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Sch Nat Resources & Environm, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
[2] Univ Florida, Dept Wildlife Ecol & Conservat, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
基金
美国食品与农业研究所; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
community function; compensation; environmental fluctuations; functional redundancy; zero-sum dynamic; SMALL MAMMALS; LONG-TERM; REDUNDANCY; ECOSYSTEM; ECOLOGY; BIODIVERSITY; DIVERSITY; DYNAMICS; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1002/ecy.3709
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Understanding the ecological processes that maintain community function in systems experiencing species loss, and how these processes change over time, is key to understanding the relationship between community structure and function and predicting how communities may respond to perturbations in the Anthropocene. Using a 30-year experiment on desert rodents, we show that the impact of species loss on community-level energy use has changed repeatedly and dramatically over time, due to (1) the addition of new species to the community, and (2) a reduction in functional redundancy among the same set of species. Although strong compensation, initially driven by the dispersal of functionally redundant species to the local community, occurred in this system from 1997 to 2010, since 2010, compensation has broken down due to decreasing functional overlap within the same set of species. Simultaneously, long-term changes in sitewide community composition due to niche complementarity have decoupled the dynamics of compensation from the overall impact of species loss on community-level energy use. Shifting, context-dependent compensatory dynamics, such as those demonstrated here, highlight the importance of explicitly long-term, metacommunity, and eco-evolutionary perspectives on the link between species-level fluctuations and community function in a changing world.
引用
收藏
页数:7
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