4.5 Article

A geometric basis for surface habitat complexity and biodiversity

Journal

NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
Volume 4, Issue 11, Pages 1495-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41559-020-1281-8

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship
  2. John Templeton Foundation
  3. Royal Society research grant
  4. Leverhulme Fellowship
  5. International Macquarie University Research Excellence Scholarship
  6. two Ian Potter Doctoral Fellowships at Lizard Island
  7. Australian Endeavour Scholarship

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A scale-independent theory of habitat complexity based on three key surface descriptors explains substantial variation in coral reef biodiversity. Structurally complex habitats tend to contain more species and higher total abundances than simple habitats. This ecological paradigm is grounded in first principles: species richness scales with area, and surface area and niche density increase with three-dimensional complexity. Here we present a geometric basis for surface habitats that unifies ecosystems and spatial scales. The theory is framed by fundamental geometric constraints between three structure descriptors-surface height, rugosity and fractal dimension-and explains 98% of surface variation in a structurally complex test system: coral reefs. Then, we show how coral biodiversity metrics (species richness, total abundance and probability of interspecific encounter) vary over the theoretical structure descriptor plane, demonstrating the value of the theory for predicting the consequences of natural and human modifications of surface structure.

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