Mesoscale variation of mechanisms contributing to stability in rocky shore communities.

Environmental fluctuations can generate asynchronous species' fluctuations and community stability, due to compensatory dynamics of species with different environmental tolerances. We tested this hypothesis in intertidal hard-bottom communities of north-central Chile, where a persistent upwelli...

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Main Authors: Nelson Valdivia, Andrés E González, Tatiana Manzur, Bernardo R Broitman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3543366?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-2552874d22fa47b09ae30272b49c8c842020-11-25T02:19:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0181e5415910.1371/journal.pone.0054159Mesoscale variation of mechanisms contributing to stability in rocky shore communities.Nelson ValdiviaAndrés E GonzálezTatiana ManzurBernardo R BroitmanEnvironmental fluctuations can generate asynchronous species' fluctuations and community stability, due to compensatory dynamics of species with different environmental tolerances. We tested this hypothesis in intertidal hard-bottom communities of north-central Chile, where a persistent upwelling centre maintains a mosaic in sea surface temperatures (SST) over 10s of kilometres along the shore. Coastal upwelling implies colder and temporally more stable SST relative to downstream sites. Uni- and multivariate analyses of multiyear timeseries of SST and species abundances showed more asynchronous fluctuations and higher stability in sites characterised by warmer and more variable SST. Nevertheless, these effects were weakened after including data obtained in sites affected by less persistent upwelling centres. Further, dominant species were more stable in sites exposed to high SST variability. The strength of other processes that can influence community stability, chiefly statistical averaging and overyielding, did not vary significantly between SST regimes. Our results provide observational evidence supporting the idea that exogenously driven compensatory dynamics and the stabilising effects of dominant species can determine the stability of ecosystems facing environmental fluctuations.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3543366?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nelson Valdivia
Andrés E González
Tatiana Manzur
Bernardo R Broitman
spellingShingle Nelson Valdivia
Andrés E González
Tatiana Manzur
Bernardo R Broitman
Mesoscale variation of mechanisms contributing to stability in rocky shore communities.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nelson Valdivia
Andrés E González
Tatiana Manzur
Bernardo R Broitman
author_sort Nelson Valdivia
title Mesoscale variation of mechanisms contributing to stability in rocky shore communities.
title_short Mesoscale variation of mechanisms contributing to stability in rocky shore communities.
title_full Mesoscale variation of mechanisms contributing to stability in rocky shore communities.
title_fullStr Mesoscale variation of mechanisms contributing to stability in rocky shore communities.
title_full_unstemmed Mesoscale variation of mechanisms contributing to stability in rocky shore communities.
title_sort mesoscale variation of mechanisms contributing to stability in rocky shore communities.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Environmental fluctuations can generate asynchronous species' fluctuations and community stability, due to compensatory dynamics of species with different environmental tolerances. We tested this hypothesis in intertidal hard-bottom communities of north-central Chile, where a persistent upwelling centre maintains a mosaic in sea surface temperatures (SST) over 10s of kilometres along the shore. Coastal upwelling implies colder and temporally more stable SST relative to downstream sites. Uni- and multivariate analyses of multiyear timeseries of SST and species abundances showed more asynchronous fluctuations and higher stability in sites characterised by warmer and more variable SST. Nevertheless, these effects were weakened after including data obtained in sites affected by less persistent upwelling centres. Further, dominant species were more stable in sites exposed to high SST variability. The strength of other processes that can influence community stability, chiefly statistical averaging and overyielding, did not vary significantly between SST regimes. Our results provide observational evidence supporting the idea that exogenously driven compensatory dynamics and the stabilising effects of dominant species can determine the stability of ecosystems facing environmental fluctuations.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3543366?pdf=render
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AT tatianamanzur mesoscalevariationofmechanismscontributingtostabilityinrockyshorecommunities
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