Temporal rarity is a better predictor of local extinction risk than spatial rarity

dc.contributor.author Wilfahrt, Peter A.
dc.contributor.author Biederman, Lori
dc.contributor.author et al.
dc.contributor.department Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology (LAS)
dc.date.accessioned 2022-02-17T16:05:27Z
dc.date.available 2022-02-17T16:05:27Z
dc.date.issued 2021-11
dc.description.abstract Spatial rarity is often used to predict extinction risk, but rarity can also occur temporally. Perhaps more relevant in the context of global change is whether a species is core to a community (persistent) or transient (intermittently present), with transient species often susceptible to human activities that reduce niche space. Using 5–12 yr of data on 1,447 plant species from 49 grasslands on five continents, we show that local abundance and species persistence under ambient conditions are both effective predictors of local extinction risk following experimental exclusion of grazers or addition of nutrients; persistence was a more powerful predictor than local abundance. While perturbations increased the risk of exclusion for low persistence and abundance species, transient but abundant species were also highly likely to be excluded from a perturbed plot relative to ambient conditions. Moreover, low persistence and low abundance species that were not excluded from perturbed plots tended to have a modest increase in abundance following perturbance. Last, even core species with high abundances had large decreases in persistence and increased losses in perturbed plots, threatening the long-term stability of these grasslands. Our results demonstrate that expanding the concept of rarity to include temporal dynamics, in addition to local abundance, more effectively predicts extinction risk in response to environmental change than either rarity axis predicts alone.
dc.description.comments This article is published as Wilfahrt, P. A., A. L. Asmus, E. W. Seabloom, J. A. Henning, P. Adler, C. A. Arnillas, J. D. Bakker, L. Biederman, L. A. Brudvig, M. Cadotte, P. Daleo, A. Eskelinen, J. Firn, W. S. Harpole, Y. Hautier, K. P. Kirkman, K. J. Komatsu, R. Laungani, A. MacDougall, R. L. McCulley, J. L. Moore, J. W. Morgan, B. Mortensen, R. Ochoa Hueso, T. Ohlert, S. A. Power, J. Price, A. C. Risch, M. Schuetz, L. Shoemaker, C. Stevens, A. T. Strauss, P. M. Tognetti, R. Virtanen, and E. T. Borer. 2021. Temporal rarity is a better predictor of local extinction risk than spatial rarity. Ecology 102(11):e03504. 10.1002/ecy.3504. Copyright by the Ecological Society of America. Posted with permission.
dc.identifier.uri https://dr.lib.iastate.edu/handle/20.500.12876/RwyqXEdw
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher © 2021 by the Ecological Society of America
dc.source.uri https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3504 *
dc.subject.disciplines DegreeDisciplines::Life Sciences::Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
dc.subject.disciplines DegreeDisciplines::Social and Behavioral Sciences::Geography::Spatial Science
dc.subject.keywords core-transient
dc.subject.keywords extinction risk
dc.subject.keywords grasslands
dc.subject.keywords herbivores
dc.subject.keywords NutNet
dc.subject.keywords nutrients
dc.subject.keywords rarity
dc.title Temporal rarity is a better predictor of local extinction risk than spatial rarity
dc.type article
dspace.entity.type Publication
relation.isAuthorOfPublication 8c742964-cca6-44c7-ba97-d6a9b5ec7a59
relation.isAuthorOfPublication 8c742964-cca6-44c7-ba97-d6a9b5ec7a59
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication fb57c4c9-fba7-493f-a416-7091a6ecedf1
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