Data from: Agriculturally dominated landscapes reduce bee phylogenetic diversity and pollination services
Data files
Jan 18, 2019 version files 67.96 MB
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bamm-script.R
3.93 KB
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chronos.tree.nexus
6.74 KB
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comm_data_bySiteandYear.csv
6.38 KB
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comm_data_wHB.csv
100.20 KB
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comm_data.csv
100.03 KB
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comm_phylosig.csv
129.16 KB
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control.txt
9.38 KB
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event_data.txt
417.84 KB
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ExaBayes_topologies.renamed.run-0.myRunCont2
33.13 MB
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ExaBayes_topologies.renamed.run-1.myRunCont2
33.13 MB
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fruit_data.csv
13.09 KB
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mcmc_out.txt
842.40 KB
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my_tree.tre
3.94 KB
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myPriors.txt
283 B
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NestednessTurnover_code.R
2.24 KB
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NestednessTurnover_comm_data.csv
14.82 KB
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path_analysis_code.R
2.16 KB
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PhyDiv_analysis_code.R
9.16 KB
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PhyloSig_analysis_code.R
839 B
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sample_probs.txt
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trait_data.csv
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transect_data.csv
25.16 KB
Abstract
Land-use change threatens global biodiversity and may reshape the tree of life by favoring some lineages over others. Whether phylogenetic diversity loss compromises ecosystem service delivery remains unknown. We address this knowledge gap using extensive genomic, community, and crop datasets to examine relationships among land use, pollinator phylogenetic structure, and crop production. Pollinator communities in highly agricultural landscapes contain 230 million fewer years of evolutionary history; this loss was strongly associated with reduced crop yield and quality. Our study links landscape–mediated changes in the phylogenetic structure of natural communities to the disruption of ecosystem services. Measuring conservation success by species counts alone may fail to protect ecosystem functions and the full diversity of life from which they are derived.