Dominance structure of assemblages is regulated over a period of rapid environmental change

Ecological assemblages are inherently uneven, with numerically dominant species contributing disproportionately to ecosystem services. Marked biodiversity change due to growing pressures on the world's ecosystems is now well documented. However, the hypothesis that dominant species are becoming...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biology letters (2005) 2018-06, Vol.14 (6), p.20180187-20180187
Hauptverfasser: Jones, Faith A. M., Magurran, Anne E.
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Magurran, Anne E.
description Ecological assemblages are inherently uneven, with numerically dominant species contributing disproportionately to ecosystem services. Marked biodiversity change due to growing pressures on the world's ecosystems is now well documented. However, the hypothesis that dominant species are becoming relatively more abundant has not been tested. We examined the prediction that the dominance structure of contemporary communities is shifting, using a meta-analysis of 110 assemblage timeseries. Changes in relative and absolute dominance were evaluated with mixed and cyclic-shift permutation models. Our analysis uncovered no evidence of a systematic change in either form of dominance, but established that relative dominance is preserved even when assemblage size (total N) changes. This suggests that dominance structure is regulated alongside richness and assemblage size, and highlights the importance of investigating multiple components of assemblage diversity when evaluating ecosystem responses to environmental drivers.
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subjects Animals
Assemblage
Biodiversity
Dominance
Dominant species
Ecosystem
Ecosystem services
Ecosystems
Environmental changes
Global Change Biology
Models, Theoretical
Permutations
Plants
Time Series
title Dominance structure of assemblages is regulated over a period of rapid environmental change
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