Looking back on biodiversity change : lessons for the road ahead
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Date
17/07/2023Author
Grant ID
894644
NE/T004487/1
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Estimating biodiversity change across the planet in the context of widespread human modification is a critical challenge. Here, we review how biodiversity has changed in recent decades across scales and taxonomic groups, focusing on four diversity metrics: species richness, temporal turnover, spatial beta-diversity and abundance. At local scales, change across all metrics includes many examples of both increases and declines and tends to be centred around zero, but with higher prevalence of declining trends in beta-diversity (increasing similarity in composition across space or biotic homogenisation) and abundance. The exception to this pattern is temporal turnover, with changes in species composition through time observed in most local assemblages. Less is known about change at regional scales, although several studies suggest that increases in richness are more prevalent than declines. Change at the global scale is the hardest to estimate accurately, but most studies suggest extinction rates are likely outpacing speciation rates, although both are elevated. Recognising this variability is essential to accurately portray how biodiversity change is unfolding, and highlights how much remains unknown about the magnitude and direction of multiple biodiversity metrics at different scales. Reducing these blind spots is essential to allow appropriate management actions to be deployed.
Citation
Dornelas , M , Chase , J M , Gotelli , N J , Magurran , A , McGill , B J , Antão , L H , Blowes , S A , Daskalova , G N , Leung , B , Martins , I S , Moyes , F H , Myers-Smith , I H , Thomas , C D & Vellend , M 2023 , ' Looking back on biodiversity change : lessons for the road ahead ' , Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences , vol. 378 , no. 1881 , 20220199 . https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0199
Publication
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0962-8436Type
Journal item
Description
Funding: Funding was provided by the Leverhulme Trust Research Centre–the Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity (M.D., ISM) and a Leverhulme Research grant (RPG-2019-402, A.E.M. and M.D.), a National Science Foundation–Natural Environment Research Council Biological Oceanography grant no. (1948946) (M.D.). M.D. was funded by the European Union (CoralINT, GA 101044975). J.M.C. and S.A.B. gratefully acknowledge the support of the German Centre of Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig (funded by the German Research Foundation; FZT 118, 20254881). M.V. was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. I.S.M. has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement no. 894644. L.H.A. was funded by the Academy of Finland (grant no. 340280). B.J.M. acknowledges support from USDA Hatch grant no. MAFES no. 1011538 and NSF EPSCOR Track II grant no. 2019470. G.N.D. was funded by a Schmidt Science Fellowship. N.J.G. acknowledges support from NSF EPSCOR Track II grant no. 2019470. B.L. was funded by a Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Discovery grant no. (04086-2017). A.E.M. and M.D. acknowledge support from NERC grant NE/T004487/1.Collections
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