Species removal dampens the scale dependency of ecological determinism
and stochasticity in coastal communities
Abstract
Deterministic and stochastic processes control community dynamics.
However, the responses of both processes to the loss of foundation
species, which strongly influence community dynamics across spatial
scales, are unclear. We experimentally examined how spatial extent and
foundation species removal affect rocky-intertidal community dynamics
over three years in eight field sites spanning ~1000 km
along the southeastern Pacific. The normalised stochasticity ratio
(NST), which distinguishes between stochastic (>50%) and
deterministic (<50%) community dynamics, decreased with spatial
extent for sessile and mobile species, with consistently lower values
under foundation species removal for sessile communities. The effect of
foundation species removal on NST was strongest in smaller sessile
communities and diminished as spatial extent increased, while mobile
communities showed no significant response to the disturbance. Our
experimental results demonstrate that the loss of foundation species
disrupts the scale dependency of ecological mechanisms, highlighting its
implications for biodiversity conservation and ecosystem functioning.