Environmental change and declining resource availability for small-mammal communities in the Great Basin

Changes in climate and land use can impact natural systems across all levels of ecological organization. Most documented and anticipated effects consider species' properties, including phenologies, geographic distributions, and abundances. Responses of higher-level aggregate community or ecosys...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology (Durham) 2011-06, Vol.92 (6), p.1366-1375
Hauptverfasser: Rowe, Rebecca J, Terry, Rebecca C, Rickart, Eric A
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container_title Ecology (Durham)
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creator Rowe, Rebecca J
Terry, Rebecca C
Rickart, Eric A
description Changes in climate and land use can impact natural systems across all levels of ecological organization. Most documented and anticipated effects consider species' properties, including phenologies, geographic distributions, and abundances. Responses of higher-level aggregate community or ecosystem properties have not been considered as they are assumed to be relatively stable due to compensatory dynamics and diversity-–stability relationships. However, this assumption may not be as fundamental as previously thought. Here we assess stability in the aggregate properties of total abundance, biomass, and energy consumption for small-mammal communities in the Great Basin, using paired historical and modern survey data spanning nearly a century of environmental change. Results show marked declines in each aggregate property independent of spatial scale, elevation, or habitat type, and a reallocation of available biomass and energy favoring diet and habitat generalists. Because aggregate properties directly reflect resource availability, our findings indicate a regionwide decline in resources of ∼∼50%% over the past century, which may signal a resource crisis. This work illustrates the power of using aggregate properties as indicators of ecological conditions and environmental change at broad spatial and temporal scales.
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subjects Altitude
Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Animals
Biodiversity
Bioenergy
Biological and medical sciences
Biomass
Climate Change
Climate models
Climatology. Bioclimatology. Climate change
Diet
Earth, ocean, space
ecological indicators
Ecosystem
ecosystem stability
Ecosystems
Energy consumption
energy use
Environmental conditions
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Functional groups
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects
generalist species
Great Basin
historical resurveys
Human ecology
land use
Mammals
Meteorology
Natural resources
Nevada
resource limitation
Small mammals
Species
Synecology
USA
title Environmental change and declining resource availability for small-mammal communities in the Great Basin
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