Response trait diversity and species asynchrony underlie the diversity–stability relationship in Romanian bird communities

Author:

White Hannah J.1ORCID,Bailey Joseph J.12ORCID,Bogdan Ciortan23,Ross Samuel R. P.‐J.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences Anglia Ruskin University Cambridge UK

2. Operation Wallacea Lincolnshire UK

3. Romanian Ornithological Society (SOR) Bucharest Romania

4. Integrative Community Ecology Unit Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University Onna‐son Okinawa Japan

Abstract

Abstract Biodiversity–stability relationships have frequently been studied in ecology, with the recent integration of traits to explain community stability over time. Classical theory underlying the biodiversity–stability relationship posits that different species' responses to the environment should stabilise community‐level properties (e.g. biomass or abundance) through compensatory dynamics. However, functional response traits, which aim to predict how species respond to environmental change, are still rarely integrated into studies of ecological stability. Such traits should mechanistically drive community stability, both in terms of community abundance (functional variability) and composition (compositional variability). In turn, whether and how functional or compositional stability scales to affect temporal variation in functional effect traits (a proxy for ecosystem functioning) remains largely unknown, but is key to consistent ecosystem functioning under environmental change. Here, we explore the diversity–stability relationship in bird communities using annual survey data across 98 sites in central Romania, in combination with global trait databases and structural equation models. We show that higher response trait diversity promotes compositional variability directly, and functional variability indirectly via species asynchrony. In turn, functional variability impacts the temporal stability of effect trait diversity. Multiple facets of diversity and community stability differ between natural forests and agricultural or human‐dominated survey sites, and the relationship between response diversity and functional variability is mediated by land cover. Further integration of response‐and‐effect trait frameworks into studies of community stability will enhance understanding of the drivers of biodiversity change, allowing targeted conservation decision‐making with a focus on stable ecosystem functioning in the face of global environmental change.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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