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Dispersal and neutral sampling mediate contingent effects of disturbance on plant beta‐diversity: a meta‐analysis
Authors:Christopher P Catano  Timothy L Dickson  Jonathan A Myers
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA;2. Department of Biology, University of Nebraska at Omaha, Omaha, NE, USA
Abstract:A major challenge in ecology, conservation and global‐change biology is to understand why biodiversity responds differently to similar environmental changes. Contingent biodiversity responses may depend on how disturbance and dispersal interact to alter variation in community composition (β‐diversity) and assembly mechanisms. However, quantitative syntheses of these patterns and processes across studies are lacking. Using null‐models and meta‐analyses of 22 factorial experiments in herbaceous plant communities across Europe and North America, we show that disturbance diversifies communities when dispersal is limited, but homogenises communities when combined with increased immigration from the species pool. In contrast to the hypothesis that disturbance and dispersal mediate the strength of niche assembly, both processes altered β‐diversity through neutral‐sampling effects on numbers of individuals and species in communities. Our synthesis suggests that stochastic effects of disturbance and dispersal on community assembly play an important, but underappreciated, role in mediating biotic homogenisation and biodiversity responses to environmental change.
Keywords:Biotic homogenisation  community assembly  community size  ecological drift  global change  metacommunity theory  niche selection  null models  seed addition  species pools
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