Abstract

Beta-diversity was originally defined spatially, i.e., as variation in community composition among sites in a region. However, the concept of beta-diversity has since been expanded to temporal contexts. This is referred to as “temporal beta-diversity”, and most approaches are simply an extension of spatial beta-diversity. The persistence and turnover of individuals over time is a unique feature of temporal beta-diversity. Nakadai (2020) introduced the “individual-based beta-diversity” concept, and provided novel indices to evaluate individual turnover and compositional shift by comparing individual turnover between two periods at a given site. However, the proposed individual-based indices are applicable only to pairwise dissimilarity, not to multiple-temporal (or more generally, multiple-unit) dissimilarity. Here, individual-based beta-diversity indices are extended to multiple-unit cases. In addition, a novel type of random permutation criterion related to these multiple-unit indices for detecting patterns of individual persistence is introduced in the present study. To demonstrate the usage the properties of these indices compared to average pairwise measures, I applied them to a dataset for a permanent 50-ha forest dynamics plot on Barro Colorado Island in Panama. Information regarding “individuals” is generally missing from community ecology and biodiversity studies of temporal dynamics. In this context, the methods proposed here are expected to be useful for addressing a wide range of research questions regarding temporal changes in biodiversity, especially studies using traditional individual-tracked forest monitoring data.

Highlights

  • The concept of beta-diversity was introduced by Whittaker (1960, 1972) to define the variation in community composition among sites in a region

  • The purpose of this paper was to develop new multiple-unit indices that can quantify compositional variability across time according to the speed of individual turnover, as well as novel random permutation criteria to evaluate the deviation in individual persistence from the perspective of ecological drift

  • Individual turnover is a major driver of compositional change and variability within a community, it has rarely been discussed

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of beta-diversity was introduced by Whittaker (1960, 1972) to define the variation in community composition among sites in a region. Recent studies have focused on temporal changes in community composition at both single sites and multiple sites surveyed repeatedly over time (Magurran 2011; Legendre and Condit 2019). Temporal changes in community composition are referred to as “temporal beta-diversity” (Hatosy et al 2013; Legendre and Gauthier 2014; Shimadzu et al 2015), which is an extension of spatial beta-diversity. The speed and frequency of compositional change over time is associated with the speed of individual turnover, and must be considered in community comparisons because even randomly high individual turnover can result in high temporal beta-diversity (Nakadai 2020)

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