A balance of winners and losers in the Anthropocene

Ecol Lett. 2019 May;22(5):847-854. doi: 10.1111/ele.13242. Epub 2019 Mar 15.

Abstract

Scientists disagree about the nature of biodiversity change. While there is evidence for widespread declines from population surveys, assemblage surveys reveal a mix of declines and increases. These conflicting conclusions may be caused by the use of different metrics: assemblage metrics may average out drastic changes in individual populations. Alternatively, differences may arise from data sources: populations monitored individually, versus whole-assemblage monitoring. To test these hypotheses, we estimated population change metrics using assemblage data. For a set of 23 241 populations, 16 009 species, in 158 assemblages, we detected significantly accelerating extinction and colonisation rates, with both rates being approximately balanced. Most populations (85%) did not show significant trends in abundance, and those that did were balanced between winners (8%) and losers (7%). Thus, population metrics estimated with assemblage data are commensurate with assemblage metrics and reveal sustained and increasing species turnover.

Keywords: Anthropogenic; biodiversity; colonisation; extinction; population change.

Publication types

  • Letter

MeSH terms

  • Biodiversity*
  • Population Dynamics