Species richness change across spatial scales

Jonathan M. Chase(German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research), Brian J. McGill(University of Maine), Patrick L. Thompson(University of British Columbia), Laura H. Antão(University of St Andrews), Amanda E. Bates(Memorial University of Newfoundland), Shane A. Blowes(German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research), María Dornelas(University of St Andrews), Andrew Gonzalez(McGill University Health Centre), Anne E. Magurran(University of St Andrews), Sarah R. Supp(Denison University), Marten Winter(German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research), Anne D. Bjorkman(Aarhus University), Helge Bruelheide(German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research), Jarrett E. K. Byrnes(University of Massachusetts Boston), Juliano Sarmento Cabral(University of Würzburg), Robin Elahi(Pacific University), Catalina Gómez(Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute), Héctor M. Guzmán(Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute), Forest Isbell(University of Minnesota), Isla H. Myers‐Smith(University of Edinburgh), Holly P. Jones(Northern Illinois University), Jes Hines(German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research), Mark Vellend(Université de Sherbrooke), Conor Waldock(National Oceanography Centre), Mary I. O’Connor(University of British Columbia)
Oikos
April 20, 2019
Cited by 265Open Access
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Abstract

Humans have elevated global extinction rates and thus lowered global scale species richness. However, there is no a priori reason to expect that losses of global species richness should always, or even often, trickle down to losses of species richness at regional and local scales, even though this relationship is often assumed. Here, we show that scale can modulate our estimates of species richness change through time in the face of anthropogenic pressures, but not in a unidirectional way. Instead, the magnitude of species richness change through time can increase, decrease, reverse, or be unimodal across spatial scales. Using several case studies, we show different forms of scale‐dependent richness change through time in the face of anthropogenic pressures. For example, Central American corals show a homogenization pattern, where small scale richness is largely unchanged through time, while larger scale richness change is highly negative. Alternatively, birds in North America showed a differentiation effect, where species richness was again largely unchanged through time at small scales, but was more positive at larger scales. Finally, we collated data from a heterogeneous set of studies of different taxa measured through time from sites ranging from small plots to entire continents, and found highly variable patterns that nevertheless imply complex scale‐dependence in several taxa. In summary, understanding how biodiversity is changing in the Anthropocene requires an explicit recognition of the influence of spatial scale, and we conclude with some recommendations for how to better incorporate scale into our estimates of change.


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