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Population diversity and the portfolio effect in an exploited species

机译:被开发物种的种群多样性和投资组合效应

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摘要

One of the most pervasive themes in ecology is that biological diversity stabilizes ecosystem processes and the services they provide to society, a concept that has become a common argument for biodiversity conservation. Species-rich communities are thought to produce more temporally stable ecosystem services because of the complementary or independent dynamics among species that perform similar ecosystem functions. Such variance dampening within communities is referred to as a portfolio effect7 and is analogous to the effects of asset diversity on the stability of financial portfolios. In ecology, these arguments have focused on the effects of species diversity on ecosystem stability but have not considered the importance of biologically relevant diversity within individual species. Current rates of population extirpation are probably at least three orders of magnitude higher than species extinction rates, so there is a pressing need to clarify how population and life history diversity affect the performance of individual species in providing important ecosystem services. Here we use five decades of data from Oncorhynchus nerka (sockeye salmon) in Bristol Bay, Alaska, to provide the first quantification of portfolio effects that derive from population and life history diversity in an important and heavily exploited species. Variability in annual Bristol Bay salmon returns is 2.2 times lower than it would be if the system consisted of a single homogenous population rather than the several hundred discrete populations it currently consists of. Furthermore, if it were a single homogeneous population, such increased variability would lead to ten times more frequent fisheries closures. Portfolio effects are also evident in watershed food webs, where they stabilize and extend predator access to salmon resources. Our results demonstrate the critical importance of maintaining population diversity for stabilizing ecosystem services and securing the economies and livelihoods that depend on them. The reliability of ecosystem services will erode faster than indicated by species loss alone.
机译:生态学中最普遍的主题之一是生物多样性稳定了生态系统过程及其为社会提供的服务,这一概念已成为保护生物多样性的普遍论点。由于执行类似生态系统功能的物种之间的互补或独立动态,富含物种的社区被认为可以提供时间上更稳定的生态系统服务。社区内部的这种方差衰减被称为投资组合效应7,类似于资产多样性对金融投资组合稳定性的影响。在生态学中,这些论点集中在物种多样性对生态系统稳定性的影响上,但没有考虑单个物种内生物学相关多样性的重要性。当前的种群灭绝速度可能比物种灭绝速度至少高三个数量级,因此迫切需要阐明种群和生活史多样性如何影响单个物种在提供重要生态系统服务方面的绩效。在这里,我们使用来自阿拉斯加布里斯托尔湾的Oncorhynchus nerka(红鲑鱼)的五十年数据,对来自重要和大量开发物种的种群和生活史多样性的投资组合效应进行了首次量化。如果该系统仅由一个同质种群组成,而不是由当前组成的数百个离散种群组成,则布里斯托尔湾鲑鱼年度回报的可变性要低2.2倍。此外,如果是单一的同质种群,那么这种增加的变异性将导致关闭渔业的频率增加十倍。投资组合效应在流域食物网中也很明显,在那里它们稳定并扩大了捕食者对鲑鱼资源的获取。我们的结果表明,维持人口多样性对于稳定生态系统服务并确保依赖于这些服务的经济和生计至关重要。生态系统服务的可靠性受到侵蚀的速度将比仅物种丧失所指示的速度快。

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  • 来源
    《Nature》 |2010年第7298期|609-612|共4页
  • 作者单位

    School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Box 355020, Seattle, Washington 98195-5020, USA;

    rnSchool of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Box 355020, Seattle, Washington 98195-5020, USA;

    rnSchool of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Box 355020, Seattle, Washington 98195-5020, USA;

    rnSchool of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Box 355020, Seattle, Washington 98195-5020, USA;

    rnSchool of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Box 355020, Seattle, Washington 98195-5020, USA;

    rnSchool of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Box 355020, Seattle, Washington 98195-5020, USA;

    rnThe Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, 1661 Page Milt Road, Palo Alto, California 94304, USA;

  • 收录信息 美国《科学引文索引》(SCI);美国《工程索引》(EI);美国《生物学医学文摘》(MEDLINE);美国《化学文摘》(CA);
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
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