Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- To a mouse
- Chapter 1 The road ahead
- Chapter 2 Patterns in space
- Chapter 3 Patterns in time
- Chapter 4 Dimensionless patterns
- Chapter 5 Speciation
- Chapter 6 Extinction
- Chapter 7 Coevolution of habitat diversity and species diversity
- Chapter 8 Species–area curves: the classical patterns
- Chapter 9 Species–area curves: large issues
- Chapter 10 Paleobiological patterns
- Chapter 11 Other patterns with dynamic roots
- Chapter 12 Energy flow and diversity
- Chapter 13 Diversity dynamics: a hierarchical puzzle
- References
- Index
Chapter 12 - Energy flow and diversity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- To a mouse
- Chapter 1 The road ahead
- Chapter 2 Patterns in space
- Chapter 3 Patterns in time
- Chapter 4 Dimensionless patterns
- Chapter 5 Speciation
- Chapter 6 Extinction
- Chapter 7 Coevolution of habitat diversity and species diversity
- Chapter 8 Species–area curves: the classical patterns
- Chapter 9 Species–area curves: large issues
- Chapter 10 Paleobiological patterns
- Chapter 11 Other patterns with dynamic roots
- Chapter 12 Energy flow and diversity
- Chapter 13 Diversity dynamics: a hierarchical puzzle
- References
- Index
Summary
Many ecologists believe that productivity is one of the most pervasive influences on diversity. But, as I completed this book, I realized that I hardly understood that influence. Yes, diversity exhibits spatial patterns that seem related to productivity. And, as you will see, we understand the pattern that occurs at small spatial scales. We even think we understand a part of the larger-scale pattern. Yet, unlike the other spatial patterns, the productivity pattern remains somewhat mysterious. Not that people have ignored it. They have caused a river of ink to flow in its name. We just aren't sure where the river is headed.
We have two patterns to account for. First, when experimental ecologists increase productivity to small patches of plants, plant diversity declines. Second, as productivity rises on a regional scale (c. 106 km2), animal diversity first increases, then it declines.
Experimental increase of productivity
Correlations help us search for patterns. However, patterns may not reflect causes. They may instead reflect phantom correlations, correlations of one of our variables with another variable, a variable we may not even have thought about, let alone measured. That caution applies to no variable more strongly than to productivity since productivity correlates with many other important ecological variables.
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- Species Diversity in Space and Time , pp. 345 - 372Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
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