Predicting emergent animal biodiversity patterns across multiple scales

被引:0
|
作者
Johnston, Alice S. A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Cranfield Univ, Ctr Environm & Agr Informat, Cranfield, Bedfords, England
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会;
关键词
communities; ecological modelling; ecosystems; individuals; mechanisms; populations; processes; scale; space; time; FOOD-WEB; BIOTIC INTERACTIONS; MODELS; ADAPTATION; ECOLOGY; CLIMATE; CONSTRAINTS; COMPLEXITY; FRAMEWORK; ABUNDANCE;
D O I
10.1111/gcb.17397
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Restoring biodiversity-based resilience and ecosystem multi-functionality needs to be informed by more accurate predictions of animal biodiversity responses to environmental change. Ecological models make a substantial contribution to this understanding, especially when they encode the biological mechanisms and processes that give rise to emergent patterns (population, community, ecosystem properties and dynamics). Here, a distinction between 'mechanistic' and 'process-based' ecological models is established to review existing approaches. Mechanistic and process-based ecological models have made key advances to understanding the structure, function and dynamics of animal biodiversity, but are typically designed to account for specific levels of biological organisation and spatiotemporal scales. Cross-scale ecological models, which predict emergent co-occurring biodiversity patterns at interacting scales of space, time and biological organisation, is a critical next step in predictive ecology. A way forward is to first capitalise on existing models to systematically evaluate the ability of scale-explicit mechanisms and processes to predict emergent patterns at alternative scales. Such model intercomparisons will reveal mechanism to process transitions across fine to broad scales, overcome approach-specific barriers to model realism or tractability and identify gaps which necessitate the development of new fundamental principles. Key challenges surrounding model complexity and uncertainty would need to be addressed, and while opportunities from big data can streamline the integration of multiple scale-explicit biodiversity patterns, ambitious cross-scale field studies are also needed. Crucially, overcoming cross-scale ecological modelling challenges would unite disparate fields of ecology with the common goal of improving the evidence-base to safeguard biodiversity and ecosystems under novel environmental change. Tackling the ongoing planetary crisis requires environmental solutions that restore biodiversity and ecosystems. The real-world implementation of such solutions would ideally be evidence-based, allowing decision makers to evaluate their ecological consequences before implementation. Mechanistic and process-based ecological models enable predictions of emergent biodiversity responses to novel environments, but current approaches are designed for specific scales. Cross-scale ecological models, that predict emergent co-occurring biodiversity patterns at interacting scales, are a critical next step. A way forward is to capitalise on existing scale-specific models to reveal mechanism to process transitions across scales, uniting disparate fields of ecology in the future.image
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Predicting ecosystem emergent properties at multiple scales
    Gilbert, Jack A.
    Henry, Chris
    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY REPORTS, 2015, 7 (01): : 20 - 22
  • [2] Towards a unified descriptive theory for spatial ecology: predicting biodiversity patterns across spatial scales
    Azaele, Sandro
    Maritan, Amos
    Cornell, Stephen J.
    Suweis, Samir
    Banavar, Jayanth R.
    Gabriel, Doreen
    Kunin, William E.
    METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2015, 6 (03): : 324 - 332
  • [3] Investigating biodiversity patterns across scales in freshwater mussels
    Petersen, K. N.
    Wares, J. P.
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2023, 32 (22) : 5891 - 5893
  • [4] A framework for understanding how biodiversity patterns unfold across multiple spatial scales in urban ecosystems
    Swan, Christopher M.
    Brown, Bryan
    Borowy, Dorothy
    Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
    Jeliazkov, Alienor
    Knapp, Sonja
    Lososova, Zdenka
    Padulles Cubino, Josep
    Pavoine, Sandrine
    Ricotta, Carlo
    Sol, Daniel
    ECOSPHERE, 2021, 12 (07):
  • [5] Elevational patterns and hierarchical determinants of biodiversity across microbial taxonomic scales
    Yeh, Chih-Fu
    Soininen, Janne
    Teittinen, Anette
    Wang, Jianjun
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2019, 28 (01) : 86 - 99
  • [6] Editorial: Temporal Patterns and Mechanisms of Biodiversity Across Scales in East Asia
    Shen, Zehao
    Malanson, George P.
    Yao, Meng
    Zhang, Jinlong
    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2021, 9
  • [7] The multiple scales of biodiversity
    Badgley, C
    PALEOBIOLOGY, 2003, 29 (01) : 11 - 13
  • [8] The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales
    Gaëtane Le Provost
    Noëlle V. Schenk
    Caterina Penone
    Jan Thiele
    Catrin Westphal
    Eric Allan
    Manfred Ayasse
    Nico Blüthgen
    Runa S. Boeddinghaus
    Andrea Larissa Boesing
    Ralph Bolliger
    Verena Busch
    Markus Fischer
    Martin M. Gossner
    Norbert Hölzel
    Kirsten Jung
    Ellen Kandeler
    Valentin H. Klaus
    Till Kleinebecker
    Sophia Leimer
    Sven Marhan
    Kathryn Morris
    Sandra Müller
    Felix Neff
    Margot Neyret
    Yvonne Oelmann
    David J. Perović
    Sophie Peter
    Daniel Prati
    Matthias C. Rillig
    Hugo Saiz
    Deborah Schäfer
    Michael Scherer-Lorenzen
    Michael Schloter
    Ingo Schöning
    Marion Schrumpf
    Juliane Steckel
    Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter
    Marco Tschapka
    Juliane Vogt
    Christiane Weiner
    Wolfgang Weisser
    Konstans Wells
    Michael Werner
    Wolfgang Wilcke
    Peter Manning
    Nature Ecology & Evolution, 2023, 7 : 236 - 249
  • [9] The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales
    Le Provost, Gaetane
    Schenk, Noelle, V
    Penone, Caterina
    Thiele, Jan
    Westphal, Catrin
    Allan, Eric
    Ayasse, Manfred
    Bluthgen, Nico
    Boeddinghaus, Runa S.
    Boesing, Andrea Larissa
    Bolliger, Ralph
    Busch, Verena
    Fischer, Markus
    Gossner, Martin M.
    Hoelzel, Norbert
    Jung, Kirsten
    Kandeler, Ellen
    Klaus, Valentin H.
    Kleinebecker, Till
    Leimer, Sophia
    Marhan, Sven
    Morris, Kathryn
    Mueller, Sandra
    Neff, Felix
    Neyret, Margot
    Oelmann, Yvonne
    Perovic, David J.
    Peter, Sophie
    Prati, Daniel
    Rillig, Matthias C.
    Saiz, Hugo
    Schaefer, Deborah
    Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael
    Schloter, Michael
    Schoening, Ingo
    Schrumpf, Marion
    Steckel, Juliane
    Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf
    Tschapka, Marco
    Vogt, Juliane
    Weiner, Christiane
    Weisser, Wolfgang
    Wells, Konstans
    Werner, Michael
    Wilcke, Wolfgang
    Manning, Peter
    NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2023, 7 (02) : 236 - +
  • [10] Drivers and stressors of freshwater biodiversity patterns across different ecosystems and scales: a review
    Stendera, Sonja
    Adrian, R.
    Bonada, N.
    Canedo-Argueelles, M.
    Hugueny, B.
    Januschke, K.
    Pletterbauer, F.
    Hering, D.
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2012, 696 (01) : 1 - 28