Publication Announcement: Trophically Integrated Ecometric Models as Tools for Demonstrating Spatial and Temporal Functional Changes in Mammal Communities Co-authored by David Polly

A deer with large antlers sits in tall grass and wildflowers, partially concealed in a green field—an emblem of how functional changes shape mammal communities in their natural habitats.

David Polly, alumni fellow (1994-96) and professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at Indiana University, co-authored a PNAS article that examines the functional relationship between mammal locomotor traits and the environment. Read the complete PNAS article.

Abstract: We are in a modern biodiversity crisis that will restructure community compositions and ecological functions globally. Large mammals, important contributors to ecosystem function, have been affected directly by purposeful extermination and indirectly by climate and land-use changes, yet functional turnover is rarely assessed on a global scale using metrics based on functional traits. Using ecometrics, the study of functional trait distributions and functional turnover, we examine the relationship between vegetation cover and locomotor traits for artiodactyl and carnivoran communities. We show that the ability to detect a functional relationship is strengthened when locomotor traits of both primary consumers (artiodactyls, n = 157 species) and secondary consumers (carnivorans, n = 138 species) are combined into one trophically integrated ecometric model. Overall, locomotor traits of 81% of communities accurately estimate vegetation cover, establishing the advantage of trophically integrated ecometric models over single-group models (58 to 65% correct). We develop an innovative approach within the ecometrics framework, using ecometric anomalies to evaluate mismatches in model estimates and observed values and provide more nuance for understanding relationships between functional traits and vegetation cover. We apply our integrated model to five paleontological sites to illustrate mismatches in the past and today and to demonstrate the utility of the model for paleovegetation interpretations. Observed changes in community traits and their associated vegetations across space and over time demonstrate the strong, rapid effect of environmental filtering on community traits. Ultimately, our trophically integrated ecometric model captures the cascading interactions between taxa, traits, and changing environments.

Citation: Short, Rachel A., Jenny L. McGuire, P. David Polly, and A. Michelle Lawing. “Trophically integrated ecometric models as tools for demonstrating spatial and temporal functional changes in mammal communities.” PNAS, 120 (7) e2201947120. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2201947120.