Abstract

AbstractAimTo evaluate the role of seasonal and non‐seasonal productivity fluctuations in global patterns of species richness.LocationWorldwide.Time period2000–2017.Major taxa studiedAmphibians, birds, mammals.MethodsWe analysed time series of monthly variation of the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), a surrogate of primary productivity, within c. 100 km × 100 km cells across all continents, estimating the mean, periodic seasonal variation and aperiodic unpredictable fluctuations of the NDVI in these cells. We then explored the relationships between mean NDVI and the components of its temporal variation and evaluated the independent effects of the above‐mentioned variables on species richness in the three vertebrate groups by means of variation partitioning.ResultsThere is a hump‐shaped relationship between mean productivity and variation in productivity, so that temporal variation in productivity is lowest in regions with minimum and maximum values of mean productivity. Although mean productivity is a strong determinant of species richness, both seasonal and non‐seasonal productivity variation significantly affect the species richness of all studied taxa when accounting for mean productivity. However, the direction of these effects differs between regions differing in the mean productivity level. High variation in productivity has a negative effect on species richness in regions with moderate to high productivity levels, whereas species richness is higher in arid regions with high variation in productivity.Main conclusionsSpecies richness is affected by temporal variation in productivity, but these effects differ regionally. In productive areas, high environmental stochasticity may increase population extinction rates, whereas arid regions probably benefit from resource fluctuations that promote species coexistence. Our results indicate that contemporary changes in patterns of temporal resource fluctuations may affect future global patterns of biological diversity on Earth.

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