Title: Community ecology
1Community ecology
2Ecology
- Ecology is a broad discipline comprised of many
sub-disciplines. A common, broad classification,
moving from lowest to highest complexity, where
complexity is defined as the number of entities
and processes in the system under study, is - Physiological Ecology (or ecophysiology) and
Behavioral ecology examine adaptations of the
individual to its environment. - Population ecology (or autecology) studies the
dynamics of populations of a single species. - Community ecology (or synecology) focuses on the
interactions between species within an ecological
community. - Ecosystem ecology studies the flows of energy and
matter through the biotic and abiotic components
of ecosystems. - Landscape ecology examines processes and
relationship across multiple ecosystems or very
large geographic areas. - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecologist
3Statistics
- Inferential statistics is used to model patterns
in the data, accounting for randomness and
drawing inferences about the larger population.
These inferences may take the form of answers to
yes/no questions (hypothesis testing), estimates
of numerical characteristics (estimation),
prediction of future observations, descriptions
of association (correlation), or modeling of
relationships (regression). Other modeling
techniques include ANOVA, time series, and data
mining. - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistician
4What do community ecologists do?
- Identify patterns
- Describe of patterns of distribution and
abundance of gt1 species - Determine processes
- Identify and quantify interactions among species
- Relating patterns to processes
- Are observed patterns consistent with
hypothesized mechanistic processes (what is
P(data model))? - Attempt to synthesize and generalize across
systems - And
5Care for and curate ANOVA tables
Data compiled by Jessica Butler from the 2005
issues of Ecology (294 articles), Ecological
Monographs (26 articles) , and Ecological
Applications (161 articles)
6Four questions to frame the discussion
- Are data from community ecology different from
all other data? Hierarchical modeling has been
applied routinely to population-level,
observational data, but rarely (ever?) applied to
community-level, experimental data. What are
appropriate (hierarchical) models for addressing
datasets in community and ecosystem ecology? - Are community ecologists destined to live
embittered lives in a theoretical backwater? The
agony of community ecology is self-inflicted and
reflects unending political and emotional
conflicts rather than debates using rational
criteria (Evan Weiher Paul Keddy, 1999) - Why should we dip twice? Can hierarchical models
add value to the analysis of experimentally-derive
d data of community ecologists, or is ANOVA
enough? - Should we take a rest from teaching classical
statistics to community ecologists?
7Alternative community states, regime shifts, and
state-and-transition models
8An open, and interesting, question
- Are ecological communities characterized by
alternative (stable) states? - The hallmark of alternative stable states is the
presence of multiple basins of attraction across
a range of parameter values. A system with
alternative stable states must contain at least
two separate basins of attraction for at least
one point in the parameter space. (After P. S.
Petraitis S. R. Dudgeon 2004 J. exp. Mar.
Biol. Ecol. 300 343-371)
9Some related (and statistical) questions
- A community ecologist asks
- Are two observed communities consistent with a
model of alternative (stable) states? - An ecosystem ecologist asks
- Can we detect a regime shift in multiple noisy
time-series datasets? - A manager/restoration ecologist asks
- What (statistical) criteria indicate the success
of a management effort when using a
state-and-transition model of community or
ecosystem development? - And how do we educate the one(s) who do not even
know how to frame the question?
10Some important differences
- Alternative stable states (the community
perspective) - Parameters are constant
- State variables change
- Different community states result from
- Differential recruitment or initial conditions
(history matters) - An acute perturbation sufficiently large
- Regime shifts (the ecosystem perspective)
- State variables are constant
- Parameters change through time
- Different regimes are caused by
- New interactions among state variables
- A chronic (directional)
perturbation to the system changes the landscape
of the attractor(s)
to move the system to a new (local) basin of
attraction
Figure from Beisner et al. (2003) Frontiers Ecol.
Env. 1 376-382
11A clash of (statistical) cultures
- Community ecologists come from a design-based
tradition - Experimental tests of the existence of
alternative stable states must fulfill three
conditions (definitions are consistent among
studies) - States must be shown to occur in the same
environment - Experimental manipulation must be a pulse
(one-time) perturbation - Experiments and observations must be carried out
over a sufficiently long time and over a large
enough area to ensure that the alternative states
are self-sustaining - Standard analytical framework is AN(C)OVA,
perhaps in a BACI framework - P-values are common are data consistent with the
model?
12A clash of statistical cultures
- Ecosystem ecologists come from a model-based
tradition - Identification of a regime shift (definitions
vary among studies) - Thresholds, not gradual changes, characterize the
response of ecosystems to chronic environmental
changes (a community ecologists press
perturbation) - These thresholds are identified by either sudden
and dramatic or slow and gradual changes in
parameters. But, the key characteristic is that
the time-scale for the change between regimes is
much shorter than the time within alternate
regimes. - Available ecological time series are often too
short for robust analysis (in contrast with
longer oceanographic records) - Statistical framework is time-series analysis
(occasionally dynamic linear models, PCA, or
Fisher Information see Manuta 2004) - Statistical detection of shifts in time series is
not reliable evidence for underlying non-linear
processes leading to multiple stable states. - P-values are rare (but see Solow Beet 2005)
What is the likelihood of a regime shift, given
the data?
13Three datasets of interest
- Alternative community states species composition
in the Gulf of Maine (experimental) - Regime shifts time-series of phosphorus change
in a eutrophied lake (simulation) - States-and-transitions Vegetation on
rehabilitated mine sites (observational and
experimental)
14Alternative community states in the Gulf of Maine
15Alternative community states in the Gulf of Maine
- Petraitis and Dudgeon (2005 J. exp. mar. Biol.
Ecol. 326 14-26) examined changes in species
composition following experimental clearings
(1-8m diameter) at 12 sites in 4 bays on Swans
Island, Maine. - Data annual (some years twice) censuses
1996-2002 of numbers of mussels, snails,
barnacles, and fucoid algae percent cover of
mussels, barnacles, fucoid algae. - Analyses presented in paper
- Univariate mixed-model nested ANOVAs on each
taxon Y f(date, size, bay, site(bay), and all
interactions) - Multivariate Procrustes analysis (MDS) to examine
successional trajectories of different size
clearings in multivariate space.
16Time-series of phosphorus change in a eutrophied
lake
- Carpenter and Brock (2006, Ecol. Lett. 9
311-318) simulated phosphorus dynamics of lakes
subject to eutrophication. - Data time series (t 300 years) of P input
and P output in water, soil sediment. - Analysis presented in paper
- Dynamic linear model examined changes in
within-year variance (SD) associated with DLM
predictions. Increased changes in SD observed
prior to regime shift.
Photo by Brett Johnson, NTL-LTER
17Vegetation on rehabilitated mine sites
18Vegetation on rehabilitated mine sites
- Norman et al. (2006, Rest. Ecol. in press)
describe rehabilitation of abandoned bauxite
mines in Western Australia. They examined
vegetation succession at 9 replicate sites (1 ha
each) within 4 mines. Each site had 3 seed
treatments 2 fertilizer treatments. - Data vegetation composition (density, percent
cover) 1, 2, 5, 9, and 14 years after
establishment of treatments. of vegetation in 20
22-m quadrats along transects within each mine
site treatment fertilizer combination. 5
sites have adjacent controls for reference
vegetation. (Data used with permission of
Alcoa-Australia)
Photo credit http//www.osmre.gov/
- Analysis presented in paper
- univariate ANOVAs
- similarity indices
- ordinations (deleted from final version of ms.
because of inconclusive results)
19Open questions
- Are there common, underlying models that can
describe the community ecologists alternative
stable state and the ecosystem ecologists
regime shift? - Are there common analytical tools that can use
community ecologys datasets on alternative
stable states (designed, ANOVA-type data) and
ecosystem ecologys datasets on regime shifts
(observational, time-series data) in such a way
that both types of data can provide tests for a
single theory? - Can parameters for (bi-stable) models of regime
shifts or alternative stable states be estimated
from short time-series? - Can these analyses be used to provide forecasts
or benchmarks for restoration ecologists who are
managing for alternative community states?