The geography of biodiversity change in marine and terrestrial assemblages

global change biology
Authors

Shane A. Blowes

Sarah R. Supp

Laura H. Antao

Amanda Bates

Helge Bruelheide

Jonathan M. Chase

Faye Moyes

Anne Magurran

Brian McGill

Isla H. Myers-Smith

Marten Winter

Anne D. Bjorkman

Diana E. Bowler

Jarrett E. K. Byrnes

Andrew Gonzalez

Jes Hines

Forest Isbell

Holly P. Jones

Laetitia M. Navarro

Patrick L. Thompson

Mark Vellend

Conor Waldock

Maria Dornelas

Published

December 31, 2018

Doi
Abstract
Biodiversity is undergoing rapid change driven by climate change and other human influences. Blowes et al. analyze the global patterns in temporal change in biodiversity using a large quantity of time-series data from different regions (see the Perspective by Eriksson and Hillebrand). Their findings reveal clear spatial patterns in richness and composition change, where marine taxa exhibit the highest rates of change. The marine tropics, in particular, emerge as hotspots of species richness losses. Given that human activities are affecting biodiversity in magnitudes and directions that differ across the planet, these findings will provide a much needed biogeographic understanding of biodiversity change that can help inform conservation prioritization.Science, this issue p. 339; see also p. 308Human 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.
Keywords

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