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Environmental variables drive spatial patterns of trophic diversity in mammals.

Jaron AdkinsEdd HammillUmarfarooq A AbdulwahabJohn P DraperJ Marshall WolfCatherine M McClureAdrián A González OrtizEmily A ChavezTrisha B Atwood
Published in: Ecology letters (2023)
Understanding environmental drivers of species diversity has become increasingly important under climate change. Different trophic groups (predators, omnivores and herbivores) interact with their environments in fundamentally different ways and may therefore be influenced by different environmental drivers. Using random forest models, we identified drivers of terrestrial mammals' total and proportional species richness within trophic groups at a global scale. Precipitation seasonality was the most important predictor of richness for all trophic groups. Richness peaked at intermediate precipitation seasonality, indicating that moderate levels of environmental heterogeneity promote mammal richness. Gross primary production (GPP) was the most important correlate of the relative contribution of each trophic group to total species richness. The strong relationship with GPP demonstrates that basal-level resource availability influences how diversity is structured among trophic groups. Our findings suggest that environmental characteristics that influence resource temporal variability and abundance are important predictors of terrestrial mammal richness at a global scale.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • life cycle
  • genetic diversity
  • antibiotic resistance genes