Bioeconomy Science Institute, AgResearch Group
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Rapid shifts in relative abundance obscure temporal diversity changes in a metacommunity

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posted on 2025-07-08, 01:39 authored by William GodsoeWilliam Godsoe, Warwick Allen, Lauren WallerLauren Waller, Barbara BarrattBarbara Barratt, Sarah P. Flanagan, Zachary Marion, Jason Tylianakis, Elena Moltchanova, Ian Dickie
<p dir="ltr">Changes in biodiversity reflect processes acting at multiple spatial scales, from local to global, among habitats and within communities. This complexity makes it difficult to measure mechanisms that have traditionally interested ecologists, such as environmental filters. To resolve this, we propose an approach to partition temporal changes in biodiversity into contributions from selection at multiple scales. We applied this approach to study changes in the biodiversity of invertebrate herbivores from a large-scale, plant community experiment. Though the experiment was designed to foster distinct insect communities due to differences in host plants, our approach showed that selection among these treatments was a negligible facet of diversity change. These effects were swamped by rapid changes in relative abundances of aphids due to both immigration and selection across the metacommunity. More broadly, our work highlights how total change in biodiversity across a biogeographic region can be partitioned into logically distinct mechanisms.</p>

Funding

Centre of Research Excellence funding to the Bio-Protection Research Centre from the Tertiary Education Commission of New Zealand

History

Rights statement

© 2025 The Author(s). Ecology and Evolution published by British Ecological Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Publication date

2025-07-02

Project number

  • Non revenue

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Journal title

Ecology and Evolution

ISSN

2045-7758

Volume/issue number

15

Page numbers

e71694

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