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Limited impacts of extensive human land use on dominance, specialization, and biotic homogenization in boreal plant communities

BACKGROUND: Niche theory predicts that human disturbance should influence the assembly of communities, favouring functionally homogeneous communities dominated by few but widespread generalists. The decline and loss of specialists leaves communities with species that are functionally more similar. E...

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Autores principales: Mayor, Stephen J, Boutin, Stan, He, Fangliang, Cahill, James F
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4328035/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25880629
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12898-015-0037-9
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author Mayor, Stephen J
Boutin, Stan
He, Fangliang
Cahill, James F
author_facet Mayor, Stephen J
Boutin, Stan
He, Fangliang
Cahill, James F
author_sort Mayor, Stephen J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Niche theory predicts that human disturbance should influence the assembly of communities, favouring functionally homogeneous communities dominated by few but widespread generalists. The decline and loss of specialists leaves communities with species that are functionally more similar. Evenness of species occupancy declines, such that species become either widespread of rare. These patterns have often been observed, but it is unclear if they are a general result of human disturbance or specific to communities that are rich in species, in complex, spatially heterogeneous environments where the problem has often been investigated. We therefore tested whether human disturbance impacts dominance/evenness of species occupancy in communities, specialism/generalism of species, and functional biotic homogenization in the spatially relatively homogeneous, species poor boreal forest region of Alberta, Canada. We investigated 371 boreal vascular plant communities varying 0 – 100% in proportion of human land use. RESULTS: Rank species occupancy curves revealed high species dominance regardless of disturbance: within any disturbance class a few species occupied nearly every site and most species were found in a low proportion of sites. However, species were more widespread and displayed more even occupancy in intermediately disturbed communities than among communities of either low or high disturbance. We defined specialists and generalists based on turnover in co-occupants and thereby assessed impacts of human disturbance on specialization of species and community homogenization. Generalists were not disproportionately found at higher disturbance sites, and did not occupy more sites. Communities with greater human disturbance were not more functionally homogeneous; they did not harbor communities with more generalists. CONCLUSIONS: We unexpectedly did not observe strong linkages between species specialism/generalism and disturbance, nor between community homogenization and disturbance. These results contrast previous findings in more species rich, complex or spatially heterogeneous systems and ecological models. We suggest that broad occupancy-based intercommunity patterns are insensitive to human land use extent in boreal vascular plants, perhaps because of ubiquity of generalists, low species richness, and history of natural disturbance. The poor sensitivity of these metrics to disturbance presents challenges for monitoring and managing impacts to biodiversity in this region.
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spelling pubmed-43280352015-02-15 Limited impacts of extensive human land use on dominance, specialization, and biotic homogenization in boreal plant communities Mayor, Stephen J Boutin, Stan He, Fangliang Cahill, James F BMC Ecol Research Article BACKGROUND: Niche theory predicts that human disturbance should influence the assembly of communities, favouring functionally homogeneous communities dominated by few but widespread generalists. The decline and loss of specialists leaves communities with species that are functionally more similar. Evenness of species occupancy declines, such that species become either widespread of rare. These patterns have often been observed, but it is unclear if they are a general result of human disturbance or specific to communities that are rich in species, in complex, spatially heterogeneous environments where the problem has often been investigated. We therefore tested whether human disturbance impacts dominance/evenness of species occupancy in communities, specialism/generalism of species, and functional biotic homogenization in the spatially relatively homogeneous, species poor boreal forest region of Alberta, Canada. We investigated 371 boreal vascular plant communities varying 0 – 100% in proportion of human land use. RESULTS: Rank species occupancy curves revealed high species dominance regardless of disturbance: within any disturbance class a few species occupied nearly every site and most species were found in a low proportion of sites. However, species were more widespread and displayed more even occupancy in intermediately disturbed communities than among communities of either low or high disturbance. We defined specialists and generalists based on turnover in co-occupants and thereby assessed impacts of human disturbance on specialization of species and community homogenization. Generalists were not disproportionately found at higher disturbance sites, and did not occupy more sites. Communities with greater human disturbance were not more functionally homogeneous; they did not harbor communities with more generalists. CONCLUSIONS: We unexpectedly did not observe strong linkages between species specialism/generalism and disturbance, nor between community homogenization and disturbance. These results contrast previous findings in more species rich, complex or spatially heterogeneous systems and ecological models. We suggest that broad occupancy-based intercommunity patterns are insensitive to human land use extent in boreal vascular plants, perhaps because of ubiquity of generalists, low species richness, and history of natural disturbance. The poor sensitivity of these metrics to disturbance presents challenges for monitoring and managing impacts to biodiversity in this region. BioMed Central 2015-02-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4328035/ /pubmed/25880629 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12898-015-0037-9 Text en © Mayor et al.; licensee BioMed Central. 2015 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mayor, Stephen J
Boutin, Stan
He, Fangliang
Cahill, James F
Limited impacts of extensive human land use on dominance, specialization, and biotic homogenization in boreal plant communities
title Limited impacts of extensive human land use on dominance, specialization, and biotic homogenization in boreal plant communities
title_full Limited impacts of extensive human land use on dominance, specialization, and biotic homogenization in boreal plant communities
title_fullStr Limited impacts of extensive human land use on dominance, specialization, and biotic homogenization in boreal plant communities
title_full_unstemmed Limited impacts of extensive human land use on dominance, specialization, and biotic homogenization in boreal plant communities
title_short Limited impacts of extensive human land use on dominance, specialization, and biotic homogenization in boreal plant communities
title_sort limited impacts of extensive human land use on dominance, specialization, and biotic homogenization in boreal plant communities
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4328035/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25880629
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12898-015-0037-9
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