PLoS Computational Biology (Jan 2023)

Community composition exceeds area as a predictor of long-term conservation value.

  • Jacob D O'Sullivan,
  • J Christopher D Terry,
  • Ramesh Wilson,
  • Axel G Rossberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010804
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
p. e1010804

Abstract

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Conserving biodiversity often requires deciding which sites to prioritise for protection. Predicting the impact of habitat loss is a major challenge, however, since impacts can be distant from the perturbation in both space and time. Here we study the long-term impacts of habitat loss in a mechanistic metacommunity model. We find that site area is a poor predictor of long-term, regional-scale extinctions following localised perturbation. Knowledge of the compositional distinctness (average between-site Bray-Curtis dissimilarity) of the removed community can markedly improve the prediction of impacts on regional assemblages, even when biotic responses play out at substantial spatial or temporal distance from the initial perturbation. Fitting the model to two empirical datasets, we show that this conclusions holds in the empirically relevant parameter range. Our results robustly demonstrate that site area alone is not sufficient to gauge conservation priorities; analysis of compositional distinctness permits improved prioritisation at low cost.