Biodiversity change and ecosystem function in tropical forests

Recent debate about the fate of tropical forests has focused attention on the consequences of forest degradation and fragmentation for their diversity and composition, and the likely functional consequences of these changes. Existing data suggest that the responses of tropical forest plant and anima...

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Main Author: Lewis, O
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2009
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author Lewis, O
author_facet Lewis, O
author_sort Lewis, O
collection OXFORD
description Recent debate about the fate of tropical forests has focused attention on the consequences of forest degradation and fragmentation for their diversity and composition, and the likely functional consequences of these changes. Existing data suggest that the responses of tropical forest plant and animal communities to habitat change are idiosyncratic, although a few consistent patterns are emerging. In particular, it is apparent that conventional diversity and richness metrics may not adequately represent anthropogenic changes to community structure and organisation. A widespread trend is towards 'biotic homogenisation': while disturbed forests may often have an equal or even a greater number of species than undisturbed forests, these species are typically drawn from a restricted pool; and endemic, restricted-range or habitat-specialist species are most likely to decline or go extinct. Similarly, studies have documented marked changes in the structure of food webs, even where the richness and diversity of component species remains little altered. What are the likely consequences of such changes for the important ecosystem functions performed by biodiversity, such as pollination and decomposition? Much of the extensive literature on the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem function is of limited utility for answering this question, because experimental designs do not consider species-specific contributions to ecosystem function, abundance, degree of redundancy, or extinction-proneness; and few such studies have been carried out under realistic levels of diversity under field conditions, particularly in high-diversity ecosystems such as tropical forests. Furthermore, the focus has almost always been on richness as the explanatory variable, rather than the composition or structural attributes of communities. I briefly review recent papers that have begun to tackle these important issues, and consider how future research might help us understand the functional consequences of realistic changes to species composition and food-web 'biostructure' in tropical forests. © 2008 Gesellschaft für Ökologie.
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spelling oxford-uuid:1ca62138-4508-457f-8d0e-59d005ea0d422022-03-26T11:06:40ZBiodiversity change and ecosystem function in tropical forestsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1ca62138-4508-457f-8d0e-59d005ea0d42EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2009Lewis, ORecent debate about the fate of tropical forests has focused attention on the consequences of forest degradation and fragmentation for their diversity and composition, and the likely functional consequences of these changes. Existing data suggest that the responses of tropical forest plant and animal communities to habitat change are idiosyncratic, although a few consistent patterns are emerging. In particular, it is apparent that conventional diversity and richness metrics may not adequately represent anthropogenic changes to community structure and organisation. A widespread trend is towards 'biotic homogenisation': while disturbed forests may often have an equal or even a greater number of species than undisturbed forests, these species are typically drawn from a restricted pool; and endemic, restricted-range or habitat-specialist species are most likely to decline or go extinct. Similarly, studies have documented marked changes in the structure of food webs, even where the richness and diversity of component species remains little altered. What are the likely consequences of such changes for the important ecosystem functions performed by biodiversity, such as pollination and decomposition? Much of the extensive literature on the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem function is of limited utility for answering this question, because experimental designs do not consider species-specific contributions to ecosystem function, abundance, degree of redundancy, or extinction-proneness; and few such studies have been carried out under realistic levels of diversity under field conditions, particularly in high-diversity ecosystems such as tropical forests. Furthermore, the focus has almost always been on richness as the explanatory variable, rather than the composition or structural attributes of communities. I briefly review recent papers that have begun to tackle these important issues, and consider how future research might help us understand the functional consequences of realistic changes to species composition and food-web 'biostructure' in tropical forests. © 2008 Gesellschaft für Ökologie.
spellingShingle Lewis, O
Biodiversity change and ecosystem function in tropical forests
title Biodiversity change and ecosystem function in tropical forests
title_full Biodiversity change and ecosystem function in tropical forests
title_fullStr Biodiversity change and ecosystem function in tropical forests
title_full_unstemmed Biodiversity change and ecosystem function in tropical forests
title_short Biodiversity change and ecosystem function in tropical forests
title_sort biodiversity change and ecosystem function in tropical forests
work_keys_str_mv AT lewiso biodiversitychangeandecosystemfunctionintropicalforests