Biotic homogenization and changes in species diversity across human-modified ecosystems

Author:

Smart Simon M12,Thompson Ken3,Marrs Robert H2,Le Duc Mike G2,Maskell Lindsay C1,Firbank Leslie G1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Lancaster Environment CentreLibrary Avenue, Bailrigg, Lancaster LA1 4AP, UK

2. Applied Vegetation Dynamics Laboratory, School of Biological Sciences, University of LiverpoolLiverpool L69 7ZB, UK

3. Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of SheffieldSheffield S10 2TN, UK

Abstract

Changing land use and the spread of ‘winning’ native or exotic plants are expected to lead to biotic homogenization (BH), in which previously distinct plant communities become progressively more similar. In parallel, many ecosystems have recently seen increases in local species (α-) diversity, yet γ-diversity has continued to decline at larger scales. Using national ecological surveillance data for Great Britain, we quantify relationships between change in α-diversity and between-habitat homogenizations at two levels of organization: species composition and plant functional traits. Across Britain both increases and decreases in α-diversity were observed in small random sampling plots (10–200 m 2 ) located within a national random sample of 1 km square regions. As α-diversity declined (spatially in 1978 or temporally between 1978 and 1998), plant communities became functionally more similar, but species-compositional similarity declined. Thus, different communities converged on a narrower range of winning trait syndromes, but species identities remained historically contingent, differentiating a mosaic of residual species-poor habitat patches within each 1 km square. The reverse trends in β-diversity occurred where α-diversity increased. When impacted by the same type and intensity of environmental change, directions of change in α-diversity are likely to depend upon differences in starting productivity and disturbance. This is one reason why local diversity change and BH across habitats are not likely to be consistently coupled.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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