| Literature DB >> 31127672 |
Esther Sebastián-González1, Jomar Magalhães Barbosa1,2, Juan M Pérez-García1,3, Zebensui Morales-Reyes1, Francisco Botella1, Pedro P Olea4,5, Patricia Mateo-Tomás6,7, Marcos Moleón8, Fernando Hiraldo2, Eneko Arrondo2, José A Donázar2, Ainara Cortés-Avizanda2,9, Nuria Selva10, Sergio A Lambertucci11, Aishwarya Bhattacharjee12,13, Alexis Brewer12,13, José D Anadón12,13, Erin Abernethy14, Olin E Rhodes15, Kelsey Turner15, James C Beasley15, Travis L DeVault16, Andrés Ordiz17, Camilla Wikenros18, Barbara Zimmermann19, Petter Wabakken19, Christopher C Wilmers20, Justine A Smith21, Corinne J Kendall22, Darcy Ogada23,24, Evan R Buechley25,26,27, Ethan Frehner25, Maximilian L Allen28, Heiko U Wittmer29, James R A Butler30, Johan T du Toit31, John Read32, David Wilson33, Klemen Jerina34, Miha Krofel34, Rich Kostecke35, Richard Inger36, Arockianathan Samson37, Lara Naves-Alegre1, José A Sánchez-Zapata1.
Abstract
Understanding the distribution of biodiversity across the Earth is one of the most challenging questions in biology. Much research has been directed at explaining the species latitudinal pattern showing that communities are richer in tropical areas; however, despite decades of research, a general consensus has not yet emerged. In addition, global biodiversity patterns are being rapidly altered by human activities. Here, we aim to describe large-scale patterns of species richness and diversity in terrestrial vertebrate scavenger (carrion-consuming) assemblages, which provide key ecosystem functions and services. We used a worldwide dataset comprising 43 sites, where vertebrate scavenger assemblages were identified using 2,485 carcasses monitored between 1991 and 2018. First, we evaluated how scavenger richness (number of species) and diversity (Shannon diversity index) varied among seasons (cold vs. warm, wet vs. dry). Then, we studied the potential effects of human impact and a set of macroecological variables related to climatic conditions on the scavenger assemblages. Vertebrate scavenger richness ranged from species-poor to species rich assemblages (4-30 species). Both scavenger richness and diversity also showed some seasonal variation. However, in general, climatic variables did not drive latitudinal patterns, as scavenger richness and diversity were not affected by temperature or rainfall. Rainfall seasonality slightly increased the number of species in the community, but its effect was weak. Instead, the human impact index included in our study was the main predictor of scavenger richness. Scavenger assemblages in highly human-impacted areas sustained the smallest number of scavenger species, suggesting human activity may be overriding other macroecological processes in shaping scavenger communities. Our results highlight the effect of human impact at a global scale. As species-rich assemblages tend to be more functional, we warn about possible reductions in ecosystem functions and the services provided by scavengers in human-dominated landscapes in the Anthropocene.Entities:
Keywords: carrion; climate; human footprint; latitudinal hypothesis; species diversity
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31127672 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863