Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Biodiversity shows unique responses to land-use change across regional biomes
View through CrossRef
Biogeography has a critical influence on how ecological communities
respond to threats and how effective conservation interventions are
designed. For example, the resilience of ecological communities is
linked to environmental and climatic features, and the nature of threats
impacting ecosystems also varies geographically. Understanding
community-level threat responses may be most accurate at fine spatial
scales, however collecting detailed ecological data at such a high
resolution would be prohibitively resource intensive. In this study, we
aim to find the spatial scale that could best capture variation in
community-level threat responses whilst keeping data collection
requirements feasible. Using a database of biodiversity records with
extensive global coverage, we modelled species richness and total
abundance (the responses) across land-use types (reflecting threats),
considering three different spatial scales: biomes, biogeographical
realms, and regional biomes (the interaction between realm and biome).
We then modelled data from three highly sampled biomes separately to ask
how responses to threat differ between regional biomes and taxonomic
group. We found strong support for regional biomes in explaining
variation in species richness and total abundance compared to biomes or
realms alone. Our biome case studies demonstrate that there is a high
variation in magnitude and direction of threat responses across both
regional biomes and taxonomic group, but all groups in tropical forest
showed a consistently negative response, whilst many taxon-regional
biome groups showed no clear response to threat in temperate forest and
tropical grassland. Our results suggest that the taxon-regional biome
unit has potential as a reasonable spatial and ecological scale for
understanding how ecological communities respond to threats and
designing effective conservation interventions to bend the curve on
biodiversity loss.
Title: Biodiversity shows unique responses to land-use change across regional biomes
Description:
Biogeography has a critical influence on how ecological communities
respond to threats and how effective conservation interventions are
designed.
For example, the resilience of ecological communities is
linked to environmental and climatic features, and the nature of threats
impacting ecosystems also varies geographically.
Understanding
community-level threat responses may be most accurate at fine spatial
scales, however collecting detailed ecological data at such a high
resolution would be prohibitively resource intensive.
In this study, we
aim to find the spatial scale that could best capture variation in
community-level threat responses whilst keeping data collection
requirements feasible.
Using a database of biodiversity records with
extensive global coverage, we modelled species richness and total
abundance (the responses) across land-use types (reflecting threats),
considering three different spatial scales: biomes, biogeographical
realms, and regional biomes (the interaction between realm and biome).
We then modelled data from three highly sampled biomes separately to ask
how responses to threat differ between regional biomes and taxonomic
group.
We found strong support for regional biomes in explaining
variation in species richness and total abundance compared to biomes or
realms alone.
Our biome case studies demonstrate that there is a high
variation in magnitude and direction of threat responses across both
regional biomes and taxonomic group, but all groups in tropical forest
showed a consistently negative response, whilst many taxon-regional
biome groups showed no clear response to threat in temperate forest and
tropical grassland.
Our results suggest that the taxon-regional biome
unit has potential as a reasonable spatial and ecological scale for
understanding how ecological communities respond to threats and
designing effective conservation interventions to bend the curve on
biodiversity loss.
Related Results
JIT 2023 - Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores Tecnológicos
JIT 2023 - Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores Tecnológicos
Es un honor presentar este libro que compila los trabajos de investigación y desarrollo presentados en las Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores Tecnológicos (JIT) 2023. Este evento s...
“The Earth Is Dying, Bro”
“The Earth Is Dying, Bro”
Climate Change and Children
Australian children are uniquely situated in a vast landscape that varies drastically across locations. Spanning multiple climatic zones—from cool tempe...
Ecological Assessment of the Terrestrial Biomes for Wildlife in Iran
Ecological Assessment of the Terrestrial Biomes for Wildlife in Iran
Abstract
Man-made activities owing to damage and fragmentation of habitat are the biggest threats to the biodiversity of Iran's Terrestrial Biomes in recent years. To fully...
Global Open Biodiversity Data: Future Vision of FAIR Biodiversity Data Access, Management, Use and Stewardship
Global Open Biodiversity Data: Future Vision of FAIR Biodiversity Data Access, Management, Use and Stewardship
Major environmental–biodiversity changes and new developments in technology have changed the way we live, work and how we create our future. The main attention of biodiversity rese...
XXV Encuentro Nacional y XVII Encuentro Internacional de Educación Matemática en Carreras de Ingeniería -EMCI
XXV Encuentro Nacional y XVII Encuentro Internacional de Educación Matemática en Carreras de Ingeniería -EMCI
El Encuentro de Educación Matemática en Carreras de Ingeniería (EMCI) se ha consolidado, a lo largo de sus veinticinco ediciones nacionales y diecisiete internacionales, como un es...
The business case for investing in biodiversity data
The business case for investing in biodiversity data
1. The private sector is increasingly aware of its dependence on biodiversity and the financial risks and opportunities involved. This has generated a lot of demand for investing i...
Temporal patterns of burned area in the Brazilian biomes
Temporal patterns of burned area in the Brazilian biomes
Fire, a dual-edged phenomenon, holds the potential for both harm and benefit to individuals and ecosystems contingent on its location, timing, and manner of occurrence. The expansi...
Marine Biodiversity
Marine Biodiversity
The term marine biodiversity encompasses a broad range of subjects, spanning from descriptions of single species, or taxa, to habitats and ecosystems, and indeed the global ocean. ...

