Literature DB >> 31624208

The geography of biodiversity change in marine and terrestrial assemblages.

Shane A Blowes1,2, Sarah R Supp3, Laura H Antão4,5,6, Amanda Bates7, Helge Bruelheide8,9, Jonathan M Chase8,2, Faye Moyes4, Anne Magurran4, Brian McGill10, Isla H Myers-Smith11, Marten Winter8, Anne D Bjorkman12, Diana E Bowler8, Jarrett E K Byrnes13, Andrew Gonzalez14, Jes Hines8,15, Forest Isbell16, Holly P Jones17, Laetitia M Navarro8,9, Patrick L Thompson18, Mark Vellend19, Conor Waldock20, Maria Dornelas21.   

Abstract

Human activities are fundamentally altering biodiversity. Projections of declines at the global scale are contrasted by highly variable trends at local scales, suggesting that biodiversity change may be spatially structured. Here, we examined spatial variation in species richness and composition change using more than 50,000 biodiversity time series from 239 studies and found clear geographic variation in biodiversity change. Rapid compositional change is prevalent, with marine biomes exceeding and terrestrial biomes trailing the overall trend. Assemblage richness is not changing on average, although locations exhibiting increasing and decreasing trends of up to about 20% per year were found in some marine studies. At local scales, widespread compositional reorganization is most often decoupled from richness change, and biodiversity change is strongest and most variable in the oceans.
Copyright © 2019 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31624208     DOI: 10.1126/science.aaw1620

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Science        ISSN: 0036-8075            Impact factor:   47.728


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