Geographical variation in the trait-based assembly patterns of multitrophic invertebrate communities
Diane S. Srivastava, A. Andrew M. Macdonald, Valério D. Pillar, Pavel Kratina, Vanderlei J. Debastiani, Laura Melissa Guzman, Mark Kurtis Trzcinski, Olivier Dézerald, Ignacio M. Barberis, Paula M. de Omena, Gustavo Q. Romero, Fabiola Ospina-Bautista, Nicholas A. C. Marino, Céline Leroy, Vinicius F....
Diane S. Srivastava, A. Andrew M. Macdonald, Valério D. Pillar, Pavel Kratina, Vanderlei J. Debastiani, Laura Melissa Guzman, Mark Kurtis Trzcinski, Olivier Dézerald, Ignacio M. Barberis, Paula M. de Omena, Gustavo Q. Romero, Fabiola Ospina-Bautista, Nicholas A. C. Marino, Céline Leroy, Vinicius F. Farjalla, Barbara A. Richardson, Ana Z. Gonçalves, Bruno Corbara, Jana S. Petermann, Michael J. Richardson, Michael C. Melnychuk, Merlijn Jocqué, Jacqueline T. Ngai, Stanislas Talaga, Gustavo C. O. Piccoli, Guillermo Montero, Kathryn R. Kirby, Brian M. Starzomski, Régis Céréghino
ARTIGO
Inglês
Agradecimentos: This is a publication of the Bromeliad Working Group. We developed the ideas and analysis in this publication during five meetings for the FunctionalWebs project supported by CESAB (Centre for the Synthesis and Analysis of Biodiversity) through funding from the French Foundation for...
Ver mais
Agradecimentos: This is a publication of the Bromeliad Working Group. We developed the ideas and analysis in this publication during five meetings for the FunctionalWebs project supported by CESAB (Centre for the Synthesis and Analysis of Biodiversity) through funding from the French Foundation for Research on Biodiversity (FRB). Funding agencies around the world supported data collection, software development and trainee stipends as follows. Research in French Guiana was supported by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche through an Investissement d'Avenir grant (Labex CEBA, ANR-10-LABX-25-01) to C.L. and R.C., in Brazil by a BPE-FAPESP grants #2018/12225-0 and 2019/08474-86/01209-9, and funding from the Royal Society, Newton Advanced Fellowship (grant no. NAF/R2/180791) to G.Q.R. and P.K., by CNPq-Brazil research grants to V.D.P. (no. 307689/2014-0), G.Q.R. (no. 301514/2017-8) and V.F.F. (no. 312770/2014-6), in Argentina by grants from Universidad Nacional de Rosario to I.M.B. and G.M. (AGR-210 and AGR-290), and in Puerto Rico, Saba and Dominica by grants from the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland, the US NSF (DEB-0218039, DEB-0620910), USDA IITF (#01-1G11120101-001) and the Saba Conservation Foundation to B.A.R. and M.J.R. Data collection in Costa Rica was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) to D.S.S. through 20 years of Discovery Grants. We acknowledge postdoctoral fellowship support from a PNPD-CAPES grant #2014/04603-4 to P.M.d.O., a PNPD/CAPES grant #20130877 to N.A.C.M., a CNPq grant (#401345/2014-9) under the Ciências sem Fronteiras program to V.J.D., a FAPESP grant no. 2016/09699-5 to AZG and from CESAB directly to A.A.M.M. Graduate stipend support for L.M.G. was provided by NSERC (CGS-D program) and the University of British Columbia. We thank B. Gilbert for contributing data from Costa Rica, P. Rogy for sharing the output of his hellometry r package and Cedar Zulkoskey for creating the bromeliad icon in Figure 1
Ver menos
Abstract: It has been argued that the mechanisms structuring ecological communities may be more generalizable when based on traits than on species identities. If so, patterns in the assembly of community-level traits along environmental gradients should be similar in different places in the world....
Ver mais
Abstract: It has been argued that the mechanisms structuring ecological communities may be more generalizable when based on traits than on species identities. If so, patterns in the assembly of community-level traits along environmental gradients should be similar in different places in the world. Alternatively, geographical change in the species pool and regional variation in climate might result in site-specific relationships between community traits and local environments. These competing hypotheses are particularly untested for animal communities. Here we test the geographical constancy of trait-based assembly patterns using a widespread multi-trophic community: aquatic macroinvertebrates within bromeliads. We used data on 615 invertebrate taxa from 1,656 bromeliads in 26 field sites from Mexico to Argentina. We summarized invertebrate traits with four orthogonal axes, and used these trait axes to examine trait convergence and divergence assembly patterns along three environmental gradients: detrital biomass and water volume in bromeliads, and canopy cover over bromeliads. We found no overall signal of trait-based assembly patterns along any of the environmental gradients. However, individual sites did show trait convergence along detrital and water gradients, and we built predictive models to explore these site differences. Sites that showed trait convergence along detrital gradients were all north of the Northern Andes. This geographical pattern may be related to phylogeographical differences in bromeliad morphology. Bromeliads with low detritus were dominated by detritivorous collectors and filter feeders, where those with high detritus had more sclerotized and predatory invertebrates. Sites that showed the strongest trait convergence along gradients in bromeliad water were in regions with seasonal precipitation. In such sites, bromeliads with low water were dominated by soft-bodied, benthic invertebrates with simple life cycles. In less seasonal sites, traits associated with short-term desiccation resistance, such as hard exoskeletons, were more important. In summary, we show that there are strong geographical effects on the trait-based assembly patterns of this invertebrate community, driven by the biogeography of their foundational plant species as well as by regional climate. We suggest that inclusion of biogeography and climate in trait-based community ecology could help make it a truly general theory. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Resumen Se ha argumentado que los mecanismos que estructuran las comunidades ecológicas pueden ser más generalizados cuando se basan en los rasgos de las especies que en la identidad de las especies. Si este es el caso, los patrones de ensamblaje de las comunidades a nivel de rasgos a lo largo de gradientes ambientales deberían ser similares en distintos lugares en el mundo. Alternativamente, los cambios en el grupo de especies y la variación climática a nivel regional pueden resultar en una relación sitio-específica entre los rasgos de las comunidades y los ambientes locales. Estas hipótesis contrastantes no han sido probadas para las comunidades de animales. Aquí, probamos la constancia geográfica de los patrones de ensamblaje basados en rasgos utilizando una comunidad multi trófica de amplia distribución: macroinvertebrados acuáticos dentro de bromelias. Utilizamos datos de 615 taxones de invertebrados de 1,656 bromelias en 26 áreas de estudio desde México hasta Argentina. Resuminos los rasgos de los invertebrados dentro de cuatro ejes octagonal y utilizamos esos ejes para evaluar los patrones de ensamblaje de convergencia y divergencia de rasgos a lo largo de tres gradientes ambientales: biomasa de detritus y volumen de agua en las bromelias y cobertura de dosel sobre las bromelias. No encontramos ninguna señal general de patrones de ensamblaje basados en rasgos a lo largo de los gradientes ambientales. Sin embargo, sitios individuales mostraron convergencia de rasgos a lo largo de los gradientes de detritus y agua, por lo que construimos modelos predictivos para explorar estas diferencias entre sitios. Los sitios que mostraron convergencia de rasgos a lo largo del gradiente de detritus estaban al norte de los Andes del Norte. Este modelo geográfico puede ser relacionado con diferencias filogeográficas en la morfología de la bromelia. Las bromelias con bajo contenido de detritus fueron dominadas por invertebrados detritívoros colectores y filtradores mientras que bromelias con altos contenidos de detritus presentaron más invertebrados predadores y con cuerpos esclerotizados. Los sitios que tuvieron alta convergencia de rasgos a lo largo del gradiente de agua de la bromelia estuvieron en regiones con precipitaciones estacionales. En estos sitios, bromelias con bajo cantidad de agua estuvieron dominados por invertebrados bentónicos con cuerpos blandos y ciclos de vida simples. Los rasgos asociados con resistencia a la desecación a corto plazo como exoesqueletos duro fueron más importantes en sitios con menos estacionalidad. En síntesis, mostramos que hay efectos geográficos fuerte sobre los modelos de ensamblaje basados en rasgos de esta comunidad de invertebrados impulsados por la biogeografía de las especies de plantas fundacionales, así como por el clima regional. Sugerimos que la inclusión de la biogeografía y el clima en la ecología de comunidades basada en rasgos puede ayudar a hacer de esta una verdadera teoría general
Ver menos
FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULO - FAPESP
2016/09699-5; 2018/12225-0; 2019/08474-86/01209-9
CONSELHO NACIONAL DE DESENVOLVIMENTO CIENTÍFICO E TECNOLÓGICO - CNPQ
307689/2014-0; 401345/2014-9; 312770/2014-6; 301514/2017-8
COORDENAÇÃO DE APERFEIÇOAMENTO DE PESSOAL DE NÍVEL SUPERIOR - CAPES
2014/04603-4; 20130877;
Aberto
Srivastava, Diane
Autor
Geographical variation in the trait-based assembly patterns of multitrophic invertebrate communities
Diane S. Srivastava, A. Andrew M. Macdonald, Valério D. Pillar, Pavel Kratina, Vanderlei J. Debastiani, Laura Melissa Guzman, Mark Kurtis Trzcinski, Olivier Dézerald, Ignacio M. Barberis, Paula M. de Omena, Gustavo Q. Romero, Fabiola Ospina-Bautista, Nicholas A. C. Marino, Céline Leroy, Vinicius F....
Diane S. Srivastava, A. Andrew M. Macdonald, Valério D. Pillar, Pavel Kratina, Vanderlei J. Debastiani, Laura Melissa Guzman, Mark Kurtis Trzcinski, Olivier Dézerald, Ignacio M. Barberis, Paula M. de Omena, Gustavo Q. Romero, Fabiola Ospina-Bautista, Nicholas A. C. Marino, Céline Leroy, Vinicius F. Farjalla, Barbara A. Richardson, Ana Z. Gonçalves, Bruno Corbara, Jana S. Petermann, Michael J. Richardson, Michael C. Melnychuk, Merlijn Jocqué, Jacqueline T. Ngai, Stanislas Talaga, Gustavo C. O. Piccoli, Guillermo Montero, Kathryn R. Kirby, Brian M. Starzomski, Régis Céréghino
Geographical variation in the trait-based assembly patterns of multitrophic invertebrate communities
Diane S. Srivastava, A. Andrew M. Macdonald, Valério D. Pillar, Pavel Kratina, Vanderlei J. Debastiani, Laura Melissa Guzman, Mark Kurtis Trzcinski, Olivier Dézerald, Ignacio M. Barberis, Paula M. de Omena, Gustavo Q. Romero, Fabiola Ospina-Bautista, Nicholas A. C. Marino, Céline Leroy, Vinicius F....
Diane S. Srivastava, A. Andrew M. Macdonald, Valério D. Pillar, Pavel Kratina, Vanderlei J. Debastiani, Laura Melissa Guzman, Mark Kurtis Trzcinski, Olivier Dézerald, Ignacio M. Barberis, Paula M. de Omena, Gustavo Q. Romero, Fabiola Ospina-Bautista, Nicholas A. C. Marino, Céline Leroy, Vinicius F. Farjalla, Barbara A. Richardson, Ana Z. Gonçalves, Bruno Corbara, Jana S. Petermann, Michael J. Richardson, Michael C. Melnychuk, Merlijn Jocqué, Jacqueline T. Ngai, Stanislas Talaga, Gustavo C. O. Piccoli, Guillermo Montero, Kathryn R. Kirby, Brian M. Starzomski, Régis Céréghino
Fontes
Functional ecology (Fonte avulsa) |