Diversity loss from multiple interacting disturbances is regime-dependent
- PMID: 37847646
- DOI: 10.1111/ele.14325
Diversity loss from multiple interacting disturbances is regime-dependent
Abstract
Anthropogenic activities expose many ecosystems to multiple novel disturbances simultaneously. Despite this, how biodiversity responds to simultaneous disturbances remains unclear, with conflicting empirical results on their interactive effects. Here, we experimentally test how one disturbance (an invasive species) affects the diversity of a community over multiple levels of another disturbance regime (pulse mortality). Specifically, we invade stably coexisting bacterial communities under four different pulse frequencies, and compare their final resident diversity to uninvaded communities under the same pulse mortality regimes. Our experiment shows that the disturbances synergistically interact, such that the invader significantly reduces resident diversity at high pulse frequency, but not at low. This work therefore highlights the need to study simultaneous disturbance effects over multiple disturbance regimes as well as to carefully document unmanipulated disturbances, and may help explain the conflicting results seen in previous multiple-disturbance work.
Keywords: biodiversity; interacting disturbance regimes; invasion; invasion success; multiple disturbances.
© 2023 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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