Data and code from: Accounting for species interactions is necessary for predicting how arctic arthropod communities respond to climate change

Species interactions are known to structure ecological communities. Still, the influence of climate change on biodiversity has primarily been evaluated by correlating individual species distributions with local climatic descriptors, then extrapolating into future climate scenarios. We ask whether pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Abrego, Nerea, Roslin, Tomas, Huotari, Tea, Ji, Yinqiu, Schmid, Niels Martin, Wang, Jiaxin, Yu, Douglas W., Ovaskainen, Otso
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.cc2fqz65p
Description
Summary:Species interactions are known to structure ecological communities. Still, the influence of climate change on biodiversity has primarily been evaluated by correlating individual species distributions with local climatic descriptors, then extrapolating into future climate scenarios. We ask whether predictions on arctic arthropod response to climate change can be improved by accounting for species interactions. For this, we use a 14-year-long, weekly time series from Greenland, resolved to the species level by mitogenome mapping. During the study period, temperature increased by 2 °C and arthropod species richness halved. We show that with abiotic variables alone, we are essentially unable to predict species responses, but with species interactions included, the predictive power of the models improves considerably. Cascading trophic effects thereby emerge as important in structuring biodiversity response to climate change. Given the need to scale up from species-level to community-level projections of biodiversity change, these results represent a major step forward for predictive ecology. The data and code include a README.txt file, which contains the instructions for how to replicate the analyses of Abrego et al (2021) Accounting for species interactions is necessary for predicting how arctic arthropod communities respond to climate change. Ecography