Spatial, environmental, and functional distances among temporal ponds
attenuate synchronization, stabilizing plant richness and biomass
dynamics
- Lucía Sosa-Panzera,
- Verónica Pinelli,
- Matias Arim
Lucía Sosa-Panzera
Universidad de la Republica Uruguay Centro Universitario de la Región Este - Sede Maldonado
Corresponding Author:[email protected]
Author ProfileVerónica Pinelli
Universidad de la Republica Uruguay Centro Universitario de la Región Este - Sede Maldonado
Author ProfileMatias Arim
Universidad de la Republica Uruguay Centro Universitario de la Region Este - Sede Maldonado
Author ProfileAbstract
Growing evidence indicates that the tendency to synchronize community
dynamics may be a general phenomenon in nature related to metaecosystem
stability. Synchronized dynamics reduce stability since local variations
in biomass or richness are directly propagated to variations in
metacommunity dynamics. Asynchronous dynamics have a strong stabilizing
effect because of the cancelling out of local variations.
Synchronization of biodiversity dynamics may occur due to dispersal
among communities and similar responses of different communities to
correlated environmental variations---the generalized Moran effect. This
congruent response of different communities to environmental dynamics
depends on their similar functional composition, which is determined by
the similarity in local conditions and the spatial distance between
them. In a metacommunity of 51 temporary ponds that were surveyed for 14
years, we evaluated the existence of synchronized dynamics in plant
richness and biomass among communities, and their association with
temporal stability. A path analysis based on Mantel tests was used to
evaluate the hypothesized determinants of synchrony and stability.
Community-community matrices for Mantel tests were constructed with
synchrony in biomass and richness, and with the Euclidean distance in
geographic location, environmental conditions, and functional
composition. Elements of the stability matrices were the inverse of
variation in richness and biomass for each pair of ponds. A wide range
of dynamics from asynchronous to synchronous rhythms was observed, and
stability decreased with the coupling of community dynamics. Geographic,
environmental, and functional distances between pairs of communities
decoupled their dynamics in richness but weakly affected biomass
synchrony. The role of rare species in richness dynamics and of dominant
species in biomass dynamics may explain the observed discrepancies.
While evidence for biodiversity synchrony is accumulating, evaluating
the role of the proposed determinants becomes essential. Our results
support the main hypotheses but also identify discrepancies that may
devote further attention.23 Apr 2024Submitted to Oikos 24 Apr 2024Submission Checks Completed
24 Apr 2024Assigned to Editor
24 Apr 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
24 Apr 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned
31 May 2024Editorial Decision: Revise Major
19 Jul 20241st Revision Received
22 Jul 2024Submission Checks Completed
22 Jul 2024Assigned to Editor
22 Jul 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
29 Jul 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned
30 Aug 2024Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
03 Sep 20242nd Revision Received
05 Sep 2024Submission Checks Completed
05 Sep 2024Assigned to Editor
05 Sep 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
09 Sep 2024Editorial Decision: Accept