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Scaling Disturbance Instead of Richness to Better Understand Anthropogenic Impacts on Biodiversity

A primary impediment to understanding how species diversity and anthropogenic disturbance are related is that both diversity and disturbance can depend on the scales at which they are sampled. While the scale dependence of diversity estimation has received substantial attention, the scale dependence...

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Autores principales: Mayor, Stephen J., Cahill, James F., He, Fangliang, Boutin, Stan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4423832/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25951058
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125579
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author Mayor, Stephen J.
Cahill, James F.
He, Fangliang
Boutin, Stan
author_facet Mayor, Stephen J.
Cahill, James F.
He, Fangliang
Boutin, Stan
author_sort Mayor, Stephen J.
collection PubMed
description A primary impediment to understanding how species diversity and anthropogenic disturbance are related is that both diversity and disturbance can depend on the scales at which they are sampled. While the scale dependence of diversity estimation has received substantial attention, the scale dependence of disturbance estimation has been essentially overlooked. Here, we break from conventional examination of the diversity-disturbance relationship by holding the area over which species richness is estimated constant and instead manipulating the area over which human disturbance is measured. In the boreal forest ecoregion of Alberta, Canada, we test the dependence of species richness on disturbance scale, the scale-dependence of the intermediate disturbance hypothesis, and the consistency of these patterns in native versus exotic species and among human disturbance types. We related field observed species richness in 1 ha surveys of 372 boreal vascular plant communities to remotely sensed measures of human disturbance extent at two survey scales: local (1 ha) and landscape (18 km(2)). Supporting the intermediate disturbance hypothesis, species richness-disturbance relationships were quadratic at both local and landscape scales of disturbance measurement. This suggests the shape of richness-disturbance relationships is independent of the scale at which disturbance is assessed, despite that local diversity is influenced by disturbance at different scales by different mechanisms, such as direct removal of individuals (local) or indirect alteration of propagule supply (landscape). By contrast, predictions of species richness did depend on scale of disturbance measurement: with high local disturbance richness was double that under high landscape disturbance.
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spelling pubmed-44238322015-05-13 Scaling Disturbance Instead of Richness to Better Understand Anthropogenic Impacts on Biodiversity Mayor, Stephen J. Cahill, James F. He, Fangliang Boutin, Stan PLoS One Research Article A primary impediment to understanding how species diversity and anthropogenic disturbance are related is that both diversity and disturbance can depend on the scales at which they are sampled. While the scale dependence of diversity estimation has received substantial attention, the scale dependence of disturbance estimation has been essentially overlooked. Here, we break from conventional examination of the diversity-disturbance relationship by holding the area over which species richness is estimated constant and instead manipulating the area over which human disturbance is measured. In the boreal forest ecoregion of Alberta, Canada, we test the dependence of species richness on disturbance scale, the scale-dependence of the intermediate disturbance hypothesis, and the consistency of these patterns in native versus exotic species and among human disturbance types. We related field observed species richness in 1 ha surveys of 372 boreal vascular plant communities to remotely sensed measures of human disturbance extent at two survey scales: local (1 ha) and landscape (18 km(2)). Supporting the intermediate disturbance hypothesis, species richness-disturbance relationships were quadratic at both local and landscape scales of disturbance measurement. This suggests the shape of richness-disturbance relationships is independent of the scale at which disturbance is assessed, despite that local diversity is influenced by disturbance at different scales by different mechanisms, such as direct removal of individuals (local) or indirect alteration of propagule supply (landscape). By contrast, predictions of species richness did depend on scale of disturbance measurement: with high local disturbance richness was double that under high landscape disturbance. Public Library of Science 2015-05-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4423832/ /pubmed/25951058 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125579 Text en © 2015 Mayor et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mayor, Stephen J.
Cahill, James F.
He, Fangliang
Boutin, Stan
Scaling Disturbance Instead of Richness to Better Understand Anthropogenic Impacts on Biodiversity
title Scaling Disturbance Instead of Richness to Better Understand Anthropogenic Impacts on Biodiversity
title_full Scaling Disturbance Instead of Richness to Better Understand Anthropogenic Impacts on Biodiversity
title_fullStr Scaling Disturbance Instead of Richness to Better Understand Anthropogenic Impacts on Biodiversity
title_full_unstemmed Scaling Disturbance Instead of Richness to Better Understand Anthropogenic Impacts on Biodiversity
title_short Scaling Disturbance Instead of Richness to Better Understand Anthropogenic Impacts on Biodiversity
title_sort scaling disturbance instead of richness to better understand anthropogenic impacts on biodiversity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4423832/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25951058
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125579
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