Long-term responses to large-scale disturbances: Spatiotemporal variation in gastropod populations and communities
Data files
Jan 20, 2023 version files 193.17 KB
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Long-term_LFDP_data.csv
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Long-term_Point_data_working_file_1993.csv
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README.txt
Abstract
The Anthropocene is characterized by complex, primarily human-generated, disturbance regimes that include combinations of long-term press (e.g. climate change, pollution) and episodic pulse (e.g. cyclonic storms, floods, wildfires, land use change) disturbances. Within any regime, disturbances occur at multiple spatial and temporal scales, creating complex and varied interactions that influence spatiotemporal dynamics in the abundance, distribution, and biodiversity of organisms. Moreover, responses to disturbance are context-dependent, with the legacies of previous disturbances affecting responses to ensuing perturbations. We use three decades of annual data to evaluate the effects of repeated pulse disturbances and global warming on gastropod populations and communities in Puerto Rico at multiple spatial scales. More specifically, we quantify (1) the relative importance of large-scale and small-scale aspects of disturbance on variation in abundance, biodiversity, and species composition; and (2) the spatial scales at which populations and communities integrate information in the spatially heterogenous environments created by disturbances. Gastropods do not exhibit consistent decreases in abundance or biodiversity in association with global warming: abundance for many species has increased over time and species richness does not evince a temporal trend. Nonetheless, gastropods are sensitive to hurricane severity, spatial environmental variation, and successional trajectories of the flora. In addition, they exhibit context-dependent (i.e. legacy effects) responses that are scale-dependent. The Puerto Rican biota has evolved in a disturbance-mediated system. This historical exposure to repeated, severe hurricane-induced disturbances has imbued the biota with high resistance and resilience to the current disturbance regime, resulting in an ability to persist or thrive under current environmental conditions. Nonetheless, these ecosystems may yet be threatened by worsening direct and indirect effects of climate change. In particular, more frequent and severe hurricanes may prevent the establishment of closed-canopy forests, negatively impacting populations and communities that rely on these habitats.
Methods
See main paper as well as links in README file for details on data collection.
Usage notes
The data files can be opened with excel or any program that can read csv formats.