Beyond counts and averages: Relating geodiversity to dimensions of biodiversity

  • Authors: Read, Quentin D.; Zarnetske, Phoebe L.; Record, Sydne; Dahlin, Kyla M.; Costanza, Jennifer K.; Finley, Andrew O.; Gaddis, Keith D.; Grady, John M.; Hobi, Martina L.; Latimer, Andrew M.; Malone, Sparkle L.; Ollinger, Scott V; Pau, Stephanie; Wilson, Adam M.
  • Publication Year: 2020
  • Publication Series: Scientific Journal (JRNL)
  • Source: Global Ecology and Biogeography
  • DOI: 10.1111/geb.13061

Abstract

Aim: We may be able to buffer biodiversity against the effects of ongoing climate change by prioritizing the protection of habitat with diverse physical features (high geodiversity) associated with ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that maintain high biodiversity. Nonetheless, the relationships between biodiversity and habitat vary with spatial and biological context. In this study, we compare how well habitat geodiversity (spatial variation in abiotic processes and features) and climate explain biodiversity patterns of birds and trees. We also evaluate the consistency of biodiversity–geodiversity relationships across ecoregions.

Location: Contiguous USA.

Time period: 2007–2016.

Taxa studied: Birds and trees.

Methods: We quantified geodiversity with remotely sensed data and generated bi- odiversity maps from the Forest Inventory and Analysis and Breeding Bird Survey datasets. We fitted multivariate regressions to alpha, beta and gamma diversity, accounting for spatial autocorrelation among Nature Conservancy ecoregions and relationships among taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional biodiversity. We fitted models including climate alone (temperature and precipitation), geodiversity alone (topography, soil and geology) and climate plus geodiversity.

Results: A combination of geodiversity and climate predictor variables fitted most forms of bird and tree biodiversity with < 10% relative error. Models using geodiversity and climate performed better for local (alpha) and regional (gamma) diversity than for turnover-based (beta) diversity. Among geodiversity predictors, variability of elevation fitted biodiversity best; interestingly, topographically diverse places tended to have higher tree diversity but lower bird diversity.

Main conclusions: Although climatic predictors tended to have larger individual ef- fects than geodiversity, adding geodiversity improved climate-only models of biodiversity. Geodiversity was correlated with biodiversity more consistently than with climate across ecoregions, but models tended to have a poor fit in ecoregions held out of the training dataset. Patterns of geodiversity could help to prioritize conservation efforts within ecoregions. However, we need to understand the underlying mechanisms more fully before we can build models transferable across ecoregions.

  • Citation: Read, Quentin D.; Zarnetske, Phoebe L.; Record, Sydne; Dahlin, Kyla M.; Costanza, Jennifer K.; Finley, Andrew O.; Gaddis, Keith D.; Grady, John M.; Hobi, Martina L.; Latimer, Andrew M.; Malone, Sparkle L.; Ollinger, Scott V.; Pau, Stephanie; Wilson, Adam M. 2020. Beyond counts and averages: Relating geodiversity to dimensions of biodiversity. Global Ecology and Biogeography. 29(4): 696-710. https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13061.
  • Keywords: alpha diversity, beta diversity, biodiversity, breeding bird survey, conservation, forest inventory, gamma diversity, geodiversity
  • Posted Date: November 16, 2020
  • Modified Date: November 17, 2020
  • Print Publications Are No Longer Available

    In an ongoing effort to be fiscally responsible, the Southern Research Station (SRS) will no longer produce and distribute hard copies of our publications. Many SRS publications are available at cost via the Government Printing Office (GPO). Electronic versions of publications may be downloaded, printed, and distributed.

    Publication Notes

    • This article was written and prepared by U.S. Government employees on official time, and is therefore in the public domain.
    • Our online publications are scanned and captured using Adobe Acrobat. During the capture process some typographical errors may occur. Please contact the SRS webmaster if you notice any errors which make this publication unusable.
    • To view this article, download the latest version of Adobe Acrobat Reader.