Increased extinction in the emergence of novel ecological communities
0301 basic medicine
Multidisciplinary
Genetic Speciation
Datasets as Topic
Biodiversity
15. Life on land
Extinction, Biological
Plankton
03 medical and health sciences
13. Climate action
1000 General
14. Life underwater
Introduced Species
Probability
DOI:
10.1126/science.abb3996
Publication Date:
2020-10-16T19:50:21Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
Change begets change
In the Anthropocene, humans are altering ecosystems, causing extinctions, and reassorting species distributions. As we facilitate these changes, we are creating new collections of species. Such “novel communities” are not specific to our epoch, and the patterns of diversity and extinction associated with past events can shed light on the implications of current community restructuring. Pandolfi
et al.
looked at marine plankton communities over the past ∼66 million years and found that the emergence of novel communities leads to further novelty and extinction (see the Perspective by Dornelas and Madin). Although community change is a natural biological response to environmental change, the current rate of change could lead to impending and rapid impacts.
Science
, this issue p.
220
; see also p.
164
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