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BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES / ECOLOGY
Impact of an extreme climatic event on community assembly


*Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131; and
Department of Biology, Furman University, Greenville, SC 29613
Contributed by James H. Brown, January 14, 2008 (received for review December 14, 2007)
| Abstract |
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desert rodents | incumbency advantage | punctuational dynamics
Extreme climatic events, such as floods and droughts, are stochastic perturbations that have the potential to alter the outcomes of entrained population and community processes. The assembly of communities is a dynamic process in which species composition changes as some species, native or exotic, colonize or increase in abundance while other species decrease or go locally extinct (18–20). Although driven in part by deterministic intrinsic interactions, such as competition (21) and predation (22), community assembly is also influenced by stochastic extrinsic perturbations, such as physical disturbances (23), disease epidemics, and colonization of new species (24). Extreme climatic events represent massive, infrequent abiotic perturbations that can differentially affect certain species, thereby altering species composition, resource use, and interactions (10, 14–16). Effects of such perturbations on the long-term dynamics of communities are neither well documented nor well understood, most likely as a result of their rarity and stochasticity. By their very nature, infrequent unpredictable phenomena will never be subject to statistical inference that requires replication, control of variables, or large sample sizes. Nevertheless, impacts of these events can provide valuable insights into the processes—extrinsic and intrinsic, biotic and abiotic, deterministic and stochastic—that structure communities.
Long-term monitoring of community dynamics provides unique opportunities to observe extreme climatic events and to document their ecological impacts (8, 25–27). Since 1977, a community of seed-eating rodents near Portal, AZ, has been censused monthly, and two extreme precipitation events have been documented. The first occurred in 1983 when Tropical Storm Octave brought 129 mm of rain (
50% of average annual rainfall) over 6 days (25). The second and most recent occurred when a summer thunderstorm dropped 30 mm of rain in <2 h on August 14, 1999, causing sheet flooding to an average depth of
35 cm (28). These two events had large, but strikingly different, impacts on the rodent community.
Here we document the immediate and long-term impacts of the 1999 flood and then briefly compare them to the impacts of the 1983 event. The long-term study includes standardized monthly censuses of rodents, which allow us to (i) measure species-specific responses; (ii) compare community composition and dynamics before and after; and (iii) evaluate the effects of both massive perturbations and background processes, both stochastic and deterministic phenomena.
| The Setting: Pre-Flood Community Dynamics |
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| Results of the Flood |
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50% of the rodents and had been increasing before the flood (Fig. 2 A and B and Table 1). Immediately after the flood, however, D. merriami's relative abundance declined and has continued to decline, remaining 62% lower on average than predicted by extrapolating preflood trends (Table 1). Similarly, D. ordii, the less abundant kangaroo rat, also showed statistically significant but quantitatively less dramatic declines, with relative abundances 16% lower on average than expected by extrapolating preflood trends (Fig. 2 C and D and Table 1).
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These changes in species' population trends resulted in an immediate and permanent change in the composition of the rodent community. Using Euclidean distance (ED) to quantify shifts in species composition between successive 6-month intervals reveals three episodes of dramatic change (Fig. 1). The largest (ED = 0.53) occurred at the time of the 1999 flood; the magnitude of this change was nearly four times greater than the long-term average (0.14 ± 0.08). Furthermore, after this large shift, the new community composition was maintained, as evidenced by postflood EDs near the long-term average (Fig. 1). Before the flood, D. merriami was consistently the dominant rodent species, comprising 32–81% (mean = 48.3 ± 12.1%) of the individuals and 20–82% (mean = 43.5 ± 17.9%) of the biomass. Subsequently, four species, D. merriami, D. ordii, C. penicillatus, and C. baileyi, have been approximately codominant, with none accounting for >27% of the individuals or biomass, on average (Table 1) (30). After the flood D. merriami reached record low relative abundances, whereas the two Chaetodipus species reached record highs (Fig. 2).
| Discussion |
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An Extreme Event. The 1999 flood was indeed an extreme event, the only one of its kind observed in our 30-year study. Its immediate impact was highly differential across species (Fig. 3). The two species of kangaroo rats suffered >90% mortality due to the flood, whereas the two species of pocket mice experienced no detectable mortality. The deaths were probably due to drowning, because bipedal kangaroo rats are poor swimmers and poor climbers. The decreases in relative abundance of kangaroo rats, and in the overall abundance of the rodents (Fig. 1), were the greatest recorded in the 30-year history of the study. If this event is representative, the susceptibility of other kinds of organisms to impacts of extreme weather and climate change may also be highly differential across species (16). Which species die or survive may depend on highly specific, seemingly idiosyncratic features of biology.
Resetting Long-Term Population Trends. One consequence of the flood was that long-term trends in the relative abundances of the four most abundant species were reset or accelerated by the perturbation (Fig. 2). The kangaroo rat D. merriami, the most dominant species for the 22 years before the flood, still has not recovered 8 years after the perturbation. In contrast, the pocket mouse C. baileyi, which had colonized the study site in 1995 and had been increasing steadily, experienced accelerated population growth, likely facilitated by the greatly reduced abundance of its closest competitor, D. merriami. Moreover, the other pocket mouse, C. penicillatus, which had reached relative abundances of <10% before the flood, now comprises >35% of the community. These results show that large short-term perturbations can have effects on populations that last much longer than would be expected from simple recovery dynamics.
Changing Community Composition. An immediate and long-lasting effect of the above population-level responses was a wholesale reorganization of the rodent community, a permanent shift of unprecedented magnitude to a new community composition dominated by pocket mice and not seen in the 22 years before the flood (Figs. 1 and 2). This community reorganization resulted in the invading species, C. baileyi, becoming the most abundant species in 2000, displacing D. merriami. C. penicillatus became the most abundant species in 2005 and has held that position through June 2007. Previously, another dramatic change in community composition marked the colonization of the site by the pocket mouse C. baileyi in 1995 (Fig. 1) after a prolonged period of below-average precipitation (28). The ongoing population increase of this species was accelerated by the flood, and it became the most abundant species <5 years after its arrival. So community structure and dynamics can be reset on a new, relatively stable trajectory by both biotic and abiotic perturbations. One kind of biotic perturbation, seen here, is the invasion of a new species, which can be facilitated by abiotic disturbance. An important process in these dynamics is immigration from the pool of individuals and species in surrounding habitats (the metacommunity). The rapidity of population increases and the low frequencies of reproductive individuals (our unpublished data) indicate that the increases of pocket mice immediately after the flood were due predominantly to immigration.
Comparison to 1983 Flood Event. The third major shift in community composition during the 30-year history of the study occurred in response to another extreme climatic event, the excessive rainfall associated with Tropical Storm Octave in October 1983 (Fig. 1). The nature of this storm and its impact on the rodent community were markedly different from the August 1999 thunderstorm. In contrast to the 2-h thunderstorm, Octave lasted for 6 days. Rather than causing sheet flooding and immediate mortality, the prolonged heavy rainfall saturated the soil to great depth, likely causing spoilage of the seeds stored by rodents in deep granaries (25, 28). The greatest impact was on the largest and second most abundant rodent, the kangaroo rat D. spectabilis. Already decreasing gradually in abundance because of vegetation change before the storm, it suffered unprecedented mortality over the ensuing months, the winter and spring of 1983–1984 (25). The effect of Octave was to reset the existing decline, so that D. spectabilis never recovered its prestorm abundance and went locally extinct in 1994.
Comparison of these two extreme rainfall events shows both similarities and differences. Both storm events caused massive and highly species-specific mortality of dominant species, which resulted in long-lasting shifts in community composition. The causes of deaths, the time lag between the event and mortality, and the species affected, however, were totally different. The soaking of soil and spoilage of seed stores that caused the gradual die-off in D. spectabilis, a larder hoarding species, had no detectable impact on D. merriami, whose seed stores in shallow surface caches presumably dried rapidly and were undamaged. So, again, a general message from comparing the two storms is that extreme events can have species-specific impacts, which depend crucially on seemingly idiosyncratic details of biology but can nevertheless set in motion wholesale and long-lasting reorganization of the community.
Intersection of Extrinsic Perturbations and Intrinsic Interactions. The dynamics of the rodent community at Portal can be characterized as continually changing, with relatively gradual long-term trends due to background climate and vegetation change punctuated by wholesale reorganizations initiated by infrequent extrinsic perturbations (i.e., short-term extreme rainstorms) with massive impacts (25, 29, 30). To understand the impacts of the extrinsic abiotic drivers, it is essential to take account of the intrinsic competitive interactions among the rodent species. Most of the time, the seed-eating rodents at Portal are food-limited, and competition is intense because they share a common resource (34–36). This is evidenced by (i) zero-sum dynamics, such that the collective rate of energy use by all rodent species remained relatively constant over the 30 years (31, 32); and (ii) consistent, positive responses of small species, especially pocket mice, to our kangaroo rat removal experiments (33, 37). From this evidence, we infer that (i) the long-term change in precipitation regime was a gradual perturbation that favored some species to the detriment of others, resulting in gradual compositional change and long-term compensatory dynamics driven by competition for limited resources (32); and (ii) the extreme storms were large perturbations that also differentially impacted species and resulted in community reorganization under the influence of strong competition. However, in the second case, reassembly, driven by either immigration after the localized thunderstorm or reproduction after the spatially extensive tropical storm, was very rapid, and a new relatively stable species composition was established in a matter of months. Although some responses to these different types of perturbations were similar, the resulting compositions of the reassembled communities were very different because of the interaction between the selective mortality and preexisting species composition and environmental conditions.
Overcoming Incumbency Advantage. Reassembly after the flood did not change the identity of the four most abundant species, but it did change the interactions among these species. The long-term increase of D. merriami in response to the increase in shrubby vegetation and the decline of its larger competitor, D. spectabilis, was reversed (Fig. 2), and the ensuing decline of D. merriami allowed pocket mice to increase and ultimately dominate the community. These dynamics indicate that the differential mortality caused by the flood altered the preexisting dominance hierarchy, allowing formerly subordinate species that survived the event to dominate. The best explanation for these changes is that resident individuals and species had an incumbency advantage (38). Such a phenomenon has been documented for territorial individuals within species (39, 40). Here, however, loss of incumbency advantage altered interspecific competitive interactions, with profound, long-lasting effects on community structure. Such an advantage is not surprising in these desert rodents, which have established home ranges, seed stores, and burrow systems, and which rely on acquired knowledge of their territory for food finding and predator avoidance (41). Incumbency facilitates not only defense of the territory by the resident individual, but also inheritance of the home range by an offspring or conspecific upon the death of the resident. Under background conditions the effect of the incumbency advantage was to slow down and stabilize population and community dynamics.
The extreme storm event had a destabilizing effect. By causing wholesale mortality of the dominant resident rodents, the perturbation largely eliminated their incumbency advantage, made competitive interactions more nearly equal, and allowed new individuals of previously subordinate species to colonize and establish territories. The mortality of dominant residents made available the resources that they had stored and defended, and previously subordinate rodents were able to immigrate and increase. The effect of the flood in facilitating immigration of previously rare native species was similar to effects of other perturbations in facilitating colonization of exotic invasive species (24, 38, 42, 43). So, disrupting the incumbency advantage is one way that an extrinsic abiotic perturbation can interface with intrinsic competitive processes to alter assembly rules and cause wholesale community reorganization. Similar responses have been reported in plant communities in response to fire or grazing (38). Priority effects, a form of incumbency advantage for sessile organisms, are frequently invoked to account for such dynamics (44).
Furthermore, our long-term record of community dynamics on ecological time scales seems to be similar to the long-term fossil record of species dynamics on evolutionary time scales. At Portal, gradual long-term trends were punctuated by mass mortality triggered by two extreme precipitation events. In the fossil record, gradual long-term trends were punctuated by mass extinctions triggered by asteroid impacts or other perturbations (45). And in both cases massive mortality of previously dominant taxa removed their priority effects, allowed rapid increases in some surviving, previously subordinate taxa, and resulted in novel species compositions.
Concluding Remarks. Global warming is predicted to increase the frequency and magnitude of extreme climate and weather events (2, 4). Efforts to document these perturbations and to understand their environmental implications have been hampered by a lack of data, due in large part to a paucity of studies of sufficient duration and intensity (3, 13, 16). Consequently, many of the "extreme events" that have been studied are more frequent and predictable than the two storms documented here. For example, there is a substantial literature on the ecological impacts of the El Niño Southern Oscillation, and in particular on the effects of the high rainfall and severe drought during El Niño and La Niña years, respectively (8). Some of the impacts are similar to those reported here. In coastal Chile, for example, El Niño events resulted in substantial changes in desert rodent community composition, due in large part to immigration from surrounding habitats (46, 47). But other impacts are very different. For example, the main effect of El Niño was prolonged population increases fueled by a pulse of abundant new food resources, whereas the main effect of our severe storms was rapid population decreases due to catastrophic mortality. Moreover, El Niño did not have such a dramatic impact on the rodent community at Portal, where several El Niño events were not followed by increases in abundances (28).
Given the diverse phenomena that have been termed "extreme events," the relatively small number of such events that have been studied, and the diverse ecological responses that have been documented at population, community, and ecosystem levels (see above), it is premature to make sweeping generalizations. Nevertheless, comparisons between the two extreme storms at Portal, and between them and other weather and climate events reported in the literature, suggest that there may be some emerging common themes. For example, massive differential mortality and resetting of community dynamics also occurred in plant communities in response to extreme drought conditions (16, 17). Mortality caused by a hurricane interacted with intrinsic predator–prey interactions to alter population trends in insular spider and lizard communities (48, 49). The effects of such perturbations would have been very difficult to predict, but, once documented, they provide invaluable insights into the processes of population dynamics and community assembly. Our study is unique, using intensive long-term sampling to document how extreme climatic events can decimate resident species populations, alter species composition and interspecific interactions, and influence invasion dynamics. These unexpected and important results emphasize the need for additional empirical and theoretical work on the ecological consequences of global climate change.
| Methods |
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). Percent survivorship of each rodent species was calculated as the percentage of individuals captured in one 6-month period (e.g., January–June 1999, immediately preceding the flood) that were recaptured in subsequent 6-month periods. The background rates of survivorship were calculated as the percentages of all individuals marked from 1978 through 1999 that were recaptured in subsequent 6-month periods. Because these values are simply percentages based on all data, there is only one value per species per 6-month period, and therefore no statistical comparison was performed. We used recapture rate as a surrogate for survivorship, because (i) it is a simple calculation, unburdened by assumptions about trappability, movement, and death; and (ii) the actual fate of each individual not recaptured is unknown and irrelevant to our conclusions, but the rapid, concerted, unprecedented disappearance of large numbers of individuals can only reasonably be attributed to mortality. To quantify changes in community composition through time, we followed Ernest and Brown (32) and used the ED to measure the difference in relative abundances of all species between successive 6-month periods.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. |
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| Footnotes |
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To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jhbrown{at}unm.eduFreely available online through the PNAS open access option.
Author contributions: K.M.T. and J.H.B. designed research; K.M.T. and J.H.B. performed research; K.M.T. analyzed data; and K.M.T. and J.H.B. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
© 2008 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA
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