Divergent ecological responses to typhoon disturbance revealed via landscape‐scale acoustic monitoring

Author:

Ross Samuel R. P.‐J.12ORCID,Friedman Nicholas R.34ORCID,Dudley Kenneth L.3ORCID,Yoshida Takuma5ORCID,Yoshimura Masashi5ORCID,Economo Evan P.6ORCID,Armitage David W.1ORCID,Donohue Ian2ORCID

Affiliation:

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

2. Zoology, School of Natural Sciences Trinity College Dublin Dublin Ireland

3. Environmental Informatics Section Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University Onna‐son Okinawa Japan

4. Centre for Taxonomy and Morphology Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change Hamburg Germany

5. Environmental Science Section Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University Onna‐son Okinawa Japan

6. Biodiversity & Biocomplexity Unit Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University Onna‐son Okinawa Japan

Abstract

AbstractClimate change is increasing the frequency, intensity, and duration of extreme weather events across the globe. Understanding the capacity for ecological communities to withstand and recover from such events is critical. Typhoons are extreme weather events that are expected to broadly homogenize ecological dynamics through structural damage to vegetation and longer‐term effects of salinization. Given their unpredictable nature, monitoring ecological responses to typhoons is challenging, particularly for mobile animals such as birds. Here, we report spatially variable ecological responses to typhoons across terrestrial landscapes. Using a high temporal resolution passive acoustic monitoring network across 24 sites on the subtropical island of Okinawa, Japan, we found that typhoons elicit divergent ecological responses among Okinawa's diverse terrestrial habitats, as indicated by increased spatial variability of biological sound production (biophony) and individual species detections. This suggests that soniferous communities are capable of a diversity of different responses to typhoons. That is, spatial insurance effects among local ecological communities provide resilience to typhoons at the landscape scale. Even though site‐level typhoon impacts on soundscapes and bird detections were not particularly strong, monitoring at scale with high temporal resolution across a broad spatial extent nevertheless enabled detection of spatial heterogeneity in typhoon responses. Further, species‐level responses mirrored those of acoustic indices, underscoring the utility of such indices for revealing insight into fundamental questions concerning disturbance and stability. Our findings demonstrate the significant potential of landscape‐scale acoustic sensor networks to capture the understudied ecological impacts of unpredictable extreme weather events.

Funder

Canon Foundation in Europe

Irish Research Council

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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