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  4. Persist or Produce: A Community Trade-Off Tuned by Species Evenness
 
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Persist or Produce: A Community Trade-Off Tuned by Species Evenness
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688046.pdf (2.76 MB)
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Author(s)
Rohr, RP
Saavedra, S
Peralta, G
Frost, CM
Bersier, L-F
more
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Understanding the effects of biodiversity on community persistence and productivity is key to managing both natural and production systems. Because rare species face greater danger of extinction, species evenness, a measure of how similar abundances are across species in a community, is seen as a key component of biodiversity. However, previous studies have failed to find a consistent association of species evenness with species survival and biomass production. Here we provide a theoretical framework for the relationship among these three elements. We demonstrate that the lack of consistent outcomes is not an idiosyncratic artifact of different studies but can be unified under one common framework. Applying a niche theory approach, we confirm that under demographic stochasticity evenness is a general indicator of the risk of future species extinctions in a community, in accordance with the majority of empirical studies. In contrast, evenness cannot be used as a direct indicator of the level of biomass production in a community. When a single species dominates, as expressed by the constraints imposed by the population dynamics, biomass production depends on the niche position of the dominating species and can increase or decrease with evenness. We demonstrate that high species evenness and an intermediate level of biomass production is the configuration that maximizes the average species survival probability in response to demographic stochasticity.
Date Issued
2016-08-03
Date Acceptance
2016-05-19
Citation
American Naturalist, 2016, 188 (4), pp.411-422
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/32943
DOI
https://www.dx.doi.org/10.1086/688046
ISSN
1537-5323
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Start Page
411
End Page
422
Journal / Book Title
American Naturalist
Volume
188
Issue
4
Copyright Statement
© 2016 by The University of Chicago
Subjects
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Ecology
Evolutionary Biology
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
biodiversity
competition systems
demographic stochasticity
ecosystem functioning
niche theory
species coexistence
BIODIVERSITY-PRODUCTIVITY RELATIONSHIP
GLOBAL METAANALYSIS
ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION
TROPICAL FOREST
DIVERSITY
RICHNESS
DENSITY
MODEL
PATTERNS
COMPLEMENTARITY
06 Biological Sciences
Publication Status
Published
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