Warming underpins community turnover in temperate freshwater and terrestrial communities

Open Access
Authors
  • I. Khaliq
  • C. Rixen
  • F. Zellweger
  • C.H. Graham
  • M.M. Gossner
  • I.R. McFadden ORCID logo
  • L. Antão
  • J. Brodersen
  • S. Ghosh
  • F. Pomati
  • O. Seehausen
  • T. Roth
  • T. Sattler
  • S.R. Supp
  • M. Riaz
  • N.E. Zimmermann
  • B. Matthews
  • A. Narwani
Publication date 01-03-2024
Journal Nature Communications
Article number 1921
Volume | Issue number 15 | 1
Number of pages 9
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract

Rising temperatures are leading to increased prevalence of warm-affinity species in ecosystems, known as thermophilisation. However, factors influencing variation in thermophilisation rates among taxa and ecosystems, particularly freshwater communities with high diversity and high population decline, remain unclear. We analysed compositional change over time in 7123 freshwater and 6201 terrestrial, mostly temperate communities from multiple taxonomic groups. Overall, temperature change was positively linked to thermophilisation in both realms. Extirpated species had lower thermal affinities in terrestrial communities but higher affinities in freshwater communities compared to those persisting over time. Temperature change’s impact on thermophilisation varied with community body size, thermal niche breadth, species richness and baseline temperature; these interactive effects were idiosyncratic in the direction and magnitude of their impacts on thermophilisation, both across realms and taxonomic groups. While our findings emphasise the challenges in predicting the consequences of temperature change across communities, conservation strategies should consider these variable responses when attempting to mitigate climate-induced biodiversity loss.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary material.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46282-z
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85186603680
Downloads
s41467-024-46282-z (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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