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Journal Article

Citation

Schoener TW, Spiller DA. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 2006; 103(7): 2220-2225.

Affiliation

Section of Evolution and Ecology and Center for Population Biology, One Shields Avenue, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA. twschoener@ucdavis.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, National Academy of Sciences)

DOI

10.1073/pnas.0510355103

PMID

16452167

PMCID

PMC1413712

Abstract

We monitored spiders on 41 Bahamian islands for 4 years before and then 4 years after the catastrophic Hurricane Floyd passed directly over the site, inundating the study islands with its storm surge. The respective recoveries of major community properties after this annihilation were far from synchronous. Before the hurricane, the species-area relation was generally strong and the slope showed no temporal trend. After the hurricane, the slope increased from near zero (7 months later) to a value about equal to its prehurricane state. The lizard effect (difference in spider abundance or species richness between islands with and without the lizard Anolis sagrei) was generally strong before the hurricane; 7 months after, the lizard effect on abundance was weak and the effect on richness had vanished. In subsequent years, the lizard effect on abundance became strong again, but the effect on species richness remained weak. The strength of the lizard effect on both abundance and richness over the 8 years was strongly positively related to the density of lizards measured on a subset of the study islands. Twelve months after the hurricane, species richness averaged over all islands rebounded to the last prehurricane value, but abundance attained only about half that value; this finding was remarkably similar to results found in an earlier study of spiders impacted by Hurricane Lili (1996) in a different Bahamian region. Nonetheless, in the next 3 years, species richness failed to increase further, part of its long-term decline at the study site.


Language: en

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