| Literature DB >> 28145038 |
Benjamin Blonder1,2, Derek E Moulton3, Jessica Blois4, Brian J Enquist5, Bente J Graae2, Marc Macias-Fauria6, Brian McGill7, Sandra Nogué8, Alejandro Ordonez9, Brody Sandel9, Jens-Christian Svenning9.
Abstract
The coupling between community composition and climate change spans a gradient from no lags to strong lags. The no-lag hypothesis is the foundation of many ecophysiological models, correlative species distribution modelling and climate reconstruction approaches. Simple lag hypotheses have become prominent in disequilibrium ecology, proposing that communities track climate change following a fixed function or with a time delay. However, more complex dynamics are possible and may lead to memory effects and alternate unstable states. We develop graphical and analytic methods for assessing these scenarios and show that these dynamics can appear in even simple models. The overall implications are that (1) complex community dynamics may be common and (2) detailed knowledge of past climate change and community states will often be necessary yet sometimes insufficient to make predictions of a community's future state.Entities:
Keywords: Alternate states; chaos; climate change; community assembly; community climate; community response diagram; disequilibrium; hysteresis; lag; memory effects
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28145038 DOI: 10.1111/ele.12736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492