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Landscape modification and nutrient-driven instability at a distance.

Authors :
McCann KS
Cazelles K
MacDougall AS
Fussmann GF
Bieg C
Cristescu M
Fryxell JM
Gellner G
Lapointe B
Gonzalez A
Source :
Ecology letters [Ecol Lett] 2021 Mar; Vol. 24 (3), pp. 398-414. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Nov 21.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Almost 50 years ago, Michael Rosenzweig pointed out that nutrient addition can destabilise food webs, leading to loss of species and reduced ecosystem function through the paradox of enrichment. Around the same time, David Tilman demonstrated that increased nutrient loading would also be expected to cause competitive exclusion leading to deleterious changes in food web diversity. While both concepts have greatly illuminated general diversity-stability theory, we currently lack a coherent framework to predict how nutrients influence food web stability across a landscape. This is a vitally important gap in our understanding, given mounting evidence of serious ecological disruption arising from anthropogenic displacement of resources and organisms. Here, we combine contemporary theory on food webs and meta-ecosystems to show that nutrient additions are indeed expected to drive loss in stability and function in human-impacted regions. Our models suggest that destabilisation is more likely to be caused by the complete loss of an equilibrium due to edible plant species being competitively excluded. In highly modified landscapes, spatial nutrient transport theory suggests that such instabilities can be amplified over vast distances from the sites of nutrient addition. Consistent with this theoretical synthesis, the empirical frequency of these distant propagating ecosystem imbalances appears to be growing. This synthesis of theory and empirical data suggests that human modification of the Earth is strongly connecting distantly separated ecosystems, causing rapid, expansive and costly nutrient-driven instabilities over vast areas of the planet. Similar to existing food web theory, the corollary to this spatial nutrient theory is that slowing down spatial nutrient pathways can be a potent means of stabilising degraded ecosystems.<br /> (© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1461-0248
Volume :
24
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Ecology letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33222413
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13644