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Identifying the Drivers of Spatial Taxonomic and Functional Beta-Diversity of British Breeding Birds

Wayman, Joseph P. ; Sadler, Jonathan P. ; Pugh, Thomas A.M. LU ; Martin, Thomas E. ; Tobias, Joseph A. and Matthews, Thomas J. (2021) In Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 9.
Abstract

Spatial variation in community composition may be driven by a variety of processes, including environmental filtering and dispersal limitation. While work has been conducted on the relative importance of these processes on various taxa and at varying resolutions, tests using high-resolution empirical data across large spatial extents are sparse. Here, we use a dataset on the presence/absence of breeding bird species collected at the 10 km × 10 km scale across the whole of Britain. Pairwise spatial taxonomic and functional beta diversity, and the constituent components of each (turnover and nestedness/richness loss or gain), were calculated alongside two other measures of functional change (mean nearest taxon distance and mean pairwise... (More)

Spatial variation in community composition may be driven by a variety of processes, including environmental filtering and dispersal limitation. While work has been conducted on the relative importance of these processes on various taxa and at varying resolutions, tests using high-resolution empirical data across large spatial extents are sparse. Here, we use a dataset on the presence/absence of breeding bird species collected at the 10 km × 10 km scale across the whole of Britain. Pairwise spatial taxonomic and functional beta diversity, and the constituent components of each (turnover and nestedness/richness loss or gain), were calculated alongside two other measures of functional change (mean nearest taxon distance and mean pairwise distance). Predictor variables included climate and land use measures, as well as a measure of elevation, human influence, and habitat diversity. Generalized dissimilarity modeling was used to analyze the contribution of each predictor variable to variation in the different beta diversity metrics. Overall, we found that there was a moderate and unique proportion of the variance explained by geographical distance per se, which could highlight the role of dispersal limitation in community dissimilarity. Climate, land use, and human influence all also contributed to the observed patterns, but a large proportion of the explained variance in beta diversity was shared between these variables and geographical distance. However, both taxonomic nestedness and functional nestedness were uniquely predicted by a combination of land use, human influence, elevation, and climate variables, indicating a key role for environmental filtering. These findings may have important conservation implications in the face of a warming climate and future land use change.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
avifauna, beta-diversity, climate, community composition, GDM, spatial
in
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
volume
9
article number
620062
publisher
Frontiers Media S. A.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85103540554
ISSN
2296-701X
DOI
10.3389/fevo.2021.620062
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7fb2deac-cbd9-4de7-a8f4-b0e5208051ab
date added to LUP
2021-04-13 09:08:58
date last changed
2022-04-27 01:25:36
@article{7fb2deac-cbd9-4de7-a8f4-b0e5208051ab,
  abstract     = {{<p>Spatial variation in community composition may be driven by a variety of processes, including environmental filtering and dispersal limitation. While work has been conducted on the relative importance of these processes on various taxa and at varying resolutions, tests using high-resolution empirical data across large spatial extents are sparse. Here, we use a dataset on the presence/absence of breeding bird species collected at the 10 km × 10 km scale across the whole of Britain. Pairwise spatial taxonomic and functional beta diversity, and the constituent components of each (turnover and nestedness/richness loss or gain), were calculated alongside two other measures of functional change (mean nearest taxon distance and mean pairwise distance). Predictor variables included climate and land use measures, as well as a measure of elevation, human influence, and habitat diversity. Generalized dissimilarity modeling was used to analyze the contribution of each predictor variable to variation in the different beta diversity metrics. Overall, we found that there was a moderate and unique proportion of the variance explained by geographical distance per se, which could highlight the role of dispersal limitation in community dissimilarity. Climate, land use, and human influence all also contributed to the observed patterns, but a large proportion of the explained variance in beta diversity was shared between these variables and geographical distance. However, both taxonomic nestedness and functional nestedness were uniquely predicted by a combination of land use, human influence, elevation, and climate variables, indicating a key role for environmental filtering. These findings may have important conservation implications in the face of a warming climate and future land use change.</p>}},
  author       = {{Wayman, Joseph P. and Sadler, Jonathan P. and Pugh, Thomas A.M. and Martin, Thomas E. and Tobias, Joseph A. and Matthews, Thomas J.}},
  issn         = {{2296-701X}},
  keywords     = {{avifauna; beta-diversity; climate; community composition; GDM; spatial}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
  series       = {{Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution}},
  title        = {{Identifying the Drivers of Spatial Taxonomic and Functional Beta-Diversity of British Breeding Birds}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2021.620062}},
  doi          = {{10.3389/fevo.2021.620062}},
  volume       = {{9}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}