How environmental drivers of spatial synchrony interact

Author:

Reuman Daniel C.1ORCID,Castorani Max C. N.2,Cavanaugh Kyle C.3,Sheppard Lawrence W.4,Walter Jonathan A.25ORCID,Bell Tom W.67

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Center for Ecological Research, University of Kansas Lawrence KS USA

2. Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia Charlottesville VA USA

3. Department of Geography, University of California Los Angeles CA USA

4. Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom Plymouth UK

5. Center for Watershed Sciences, University of California Davis CA USA

6. Department of Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole MA USA

7. Earth Research Institute, University of California Santa Barbara CA USA

Abstract

Spatial synchrony, the tendency for populations across space to show correlated fluctuations, is a fundamental feature of population dynamics, linked to central topics of ecology such as population cycling, extinction risk, and ecosystem stability. A common mechanism of spatial synchrony is the Moran effect, whereby spatially synchronized environmental signals drive population dynamics and hence induce population synchrony. After reviewing recent progress in understanding Moran effects, we here elaborate a general theory of how Moran effects of different environmental drivers acting on the same populations can interact, either synergistically or destructively, to produce either substantially more or markedly less population synchrony than would otherwise occur. We provide intuition for how this newly recognized mechanism works through theoretical case studies and application of our theory to California populations of giant kelp. We argue that Moran interactions should be common. Our theory and analysis explain an important new aspect of a fundamental feature of spatiotemporal population dynamics.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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