Authors
Kaisa‐Leena Huttunen, Heikki Mykrä, Ari Huusko, Aki Mäki‐Petäys, Teppo Vehanen, Timo Muotka
Publication date
2014/6
Journal
Ecography
Volume
37
Issue
6
Pages
599-608
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Temporal coherence or spatial synchrony refers to the tendency of population, community or ecosystem dynamics to behave similarly among locations through time as a result of spatially‐correlated environmental stochasticity (Moran effect), dispersal or trophic interactions. While terrestrial studies have treated synchrony mainly as a population‐level concept, the majority of freshwater studies have focused on community‐level patterns, particularly in lake planktonic communities. We used spatially and temporally hierarchical data on benthic stream invertebrates across six years, with three seasonal samples a year, in 11 boreal streams to assess temporal coherence at three spatial extents: 1) among regions (watersheds), 2) among streams within a region, and 3) among riffles within a stream, using the average of correlation coefficients for stream/riffle pairs across years. Our results revealed the primacy of strongly …
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