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Biodiversity conservation through the lens of metacommunity ecology

Jonathan M. Chase, Aliénor Jeliazkov, Emma Ladouceur, Duarte S. Viana

2020Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences197 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Metacommunity ecology combines local (e.g., environmental filtering and biotic interactions) and regional (e.g., dispersal and heterogeneity) processes to understand patterns of species abundance, occurrence, composition, and diversity across scales of space and time. As such, it has a great potential to generalize and synthesize our understanding of many ecological problems. Here, we give an overview of how a metacommunity perspective can provide useful insights for conservation biology, which aims to understand and mitigate the effects of anthropogenic drivers that decrease population sizes, increase extinction probabilities, and threaten biodiversity. We review four general metacommunity processes-environmental filtering, biotic interactions, dispersal, and ecological drift-and discuss how key anthropogenic drivers (e.g., habitat loss and fragmentation, and nonnative species) can alter these processes. We next describe how the patterns of interest in metacommunities (abundance, occupancy, and diversity) map onto issues at the heart of conservation biology, and describe cases where conservation biology benefits by taking a scale-explicit metacommunity perspective. We conclude with some ways forward for including metacommunity perspectives into ideas of ecosystem functioning and services, as well as approaches to habitat management, preservation, and restoration.

Topics & Concepts

MetacommunityBiological dispersalEcologyBiodiversityConservation biologyHabitat fragmentationAbundance (ecology)HabitatSpatial ecologyGeographyPopulationBiologyDemographySociologySpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsWildlife Ecology and Conservation
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