Complex organism-environment feedbacks buffer species diversity against habitat fragmentation
Authored by Peter C Zee, Tadashi Fukami
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1111/ecog.01027
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Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Understanding the factors that determine the extent of biodiversity loss
following habitat destruction is central to ecosystem conservation and
management. One potential factor is the ecological feedbacks between
organisms and local environmental conditions, which can influence how
species affect one another and, consequently, whether or not species
persist in fragmented landscapes. We investigated this possibility using
a spatially explicit individual-based model of plant communities. In
this model, plant species affected their own and other species'
competitiveness by modifying local environmental conditions. These
plant-environment feedbacks were assumed to vary among species pairs in
direction and strength to mimic complex feedbacks observed between
plants and soil conditions in real communities. We found that complex
feedbacks reduced the extent of diversity loss, effectively buffering
species against habitat fragmentation. Our analysis suggested that this
buffering effect operated via two mechanisms. First, complex feedbacks
decreased the likelihood of immediate extinction by making the spatial
distribution of each species less clustered and consequently less likely
to be eliminated entirely by fragmentation. Second, complex feedbacks
decreased the likelihood of additional extinction by generating negative
density dependence among surviving species, thereby keeping
low-abundance species from going extinct due to demographic
stochasticity and other forces. The buffering effect was particularly
strong when species dispersed locally and abiotic environmental
conditions varied globally. Our findings highlight the potential
importance of organism-environment feedbacks in explaining species
extinction by habitat destruction.
Tags
Dynamics
Coexistence
Heterogeneity
Conservation
Community
Plant-soil feedbacks
Source-sink metacommunities
Alternative stable
states
Tropical forest fragments
Extinction debt