Increasing synchrony opposes stabilizing effects of species richness on terrestrial communities

Author:

Tsang Toby P. N.12ORCID,Ponisio Lauren C.34ORCID,Bonebrake Timothy C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong SAR China

2. Department of Biological Sciences University of Toronto Scarborough Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Institute for Ecology and Evolution University of Oregon Eugene Oregon USA

4. Data Science Initiative University of Oregon Eugene Oregon USA

Abstract

AbstractAimEcological theory has predicted that species richness should stabilize communities, with mechanisms including species synchrony and population variability determining the net impacts. While these theories have been supported empirically, results can be sensitive to taxonomic bias as studies are often focussed on plants. Trophic differences between consumers and primary producers can lead to varying stabilizing effects of species richness. Here, we compared the impact of species richness on community variability in four taxonomic groups: terrestrial birds, mammals, invertebrates and plants.LocationGlobal.MethodUsing data from 6763 time series globally (BioTIME) for four terrestrial taxa, we quantified community and population variability and species synchrony based on abundance fluctuations over time.ResultsSpecies richness destabilized communities through increasing synchrony and stabilized communities through reducing population variability in all taxa. Such opposing effects weakened the net impacts of species richness on communities. Population variability had higher importance relative to synchrony in plant communities. By contrast, synchrony had more comparable (or even higher) importance compared with population variability in animal communities. When synchrony and population variability were not controlled, stabilizing impacts of species richness were detected in plant communities only.Main ConclusionsOur results highlight how species richness drives stabilizing and destabilizing mechanisms simultaneously across all taxa, with strong taxonomic variation in the relative importance of these mechanisms in regulating community variability. This questions the generality of previous findings on stabilizing impacts of species richness based on limited taxonomic coverage. Additionally, our results indicate the need to understand how the importance of stabilizing and destabilizing mechanisms differs in determining community variability across organisms and environments.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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