Royal Society Open Science (Jul 2020)

Recent increases in assemblage rarity are linked to increasing local immigration

  • Faith A. M. Jones,
  • Maria Dornelas,
  • Anne E. Magurran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.192045
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7

Abstract

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As pressures on biodiversity increase, a better understanding of how assemblages are responding is needed. Because rare species, defined here as those that have locally low abundances, make up a high proportion of assemblage species lists, understanding how the number of rare species within assemblages is changing will help elucidate patterns of recent biodiversity change. Here, we show that the number of rare species within assemblages is increasing, on average, across systems. This increase could arise in two ways: species already present in the assemblage decreasing in abundance but with no increase in extinctions, or additional species entering the assemblage in low numbers associated with an increase in immigration. The positive relationship between change in rarity and change in species richness provides evidence for the second explanation, i.e. higher net immigration than extinction among the rare species. These measurable changes in the structure of assemblages in the recent past underline the need to use multiple biodiversity metrics to understand biodiversity change.

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