Abstract
AbstractManaging ecosystems to effectively preserve function and services requires reliable tools that can infer changes in the stability and dynamics of a system. Conceptually, functional diversity (FD) appears a viable monitoring metric due to its mechanistic influence on ecological processes, but it is unclear whether changes in FD occur prior to state responses or vice versa. We examine the lagged relationship between planktonic FD and abundance-based metrics of system state (e.g. biomass) across five highly monitored lake communities using both correlation and non-linear causality approaches. Overall, phytoplankton and zooplankton FD display synchrony with lake state but each lake is idiosyncratic in the strength of relationship. It is therefore unlikely that changes in plankton FD are identifiable before changes in more easily collected abundance metrics. This suggests that FD is unlikely to be a viable early indicator, but has value as an alternative state measure if considered at the lake level.Graphical AbstractData accessibility statement:Lake Kinneret and Lake Kasumigaura data are available on request, with all other data publicly available and referenced throughout. All code for analysis is available in the Zenodo record (to be released) and the associated GitHub repository (https://github.com/duncanobrien/plankton-FD).
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference94 articles.
1. Functional diversity of phytoplankton highlights long-term gradual regime shift in the middle section of the Danube River due to global warming, human impacts and oligotrophication;Freshwater Biology,2018
2. Functional richness outperforms taxonomic richness in predicting ecosystem functioning in natural phytoplankton communities;Freshwater Biology,2018
3. Using Fisher information to track stability in multivariate systems;Royal Society Open Science,2021
4. Albert, G. , Gauzens, B. , Loreau, M. , Wang, S. & Brose, U. (2021). The hidden role of multi-trophic interactions in driving diversity–productivity relationships. Ecology Letters, n/a.
5. Ecological thresholds and regime shifts: approaches to identification;Trends in Ecology & Evolution,2009
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献