Community assembly within ponds: the roles of space, time, and environmental gradients

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmen G. Montaña ◽  
Friedrich W. Keppeler ◽  
Clay P. Laughrey ◽  
Christopher M. Schalk
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Denelle ◽  
Cyrille Violle ◽  
François Munoz

AbstractUnderstanding the imprint of environmental filtering on community assembly along environmental gradients is a key objective of trait-gradient analyses. Depending on local constraints, this filtering generally entails that species departing from an optimum trait value have lower abundances in the community. The Community-Weighted Mean (CWM) and Variance (CWV) of trait values are then expected to depict the optimum and intensity of filtering, respectively. However, the trait distribution within the regional species pool and its limits can also affect local CWM and CWV values apart from the effect of environmental filtering. The regional trait range limits are more likely to be reached in communities at the extremes of environmental gradients. Analogous to the mid-domain effect in biogeography, decreasing CWV values in extreme environments can then represent the influence of regional trait range limits rather than stronger filtering in the local environment. We name this effect the “Trait-Gradient Boundary Effect” (TGBE). First, we use a community assembly framework to build simulated communities along a gradient from a species pool and environmental filtering with either constant or varying intensity while accounting for immigration processes. We demonstrate the significant influence of TGBE, in parallel to environmental filtering, on CWM and CWV at the extremes of the environmental gradient. We provide a statistical tool based on Approximate Bayesian Computation to decipher the respective influence of local environmental filtering and regional trait range limits. Second, as a case study, we reanalyze the functional composition of alpine plant communities distributed along a gradient of snow cover duration. We show that leaf trait convergence found in communities at the extremes of the gradient reflect an influence of trait range limits rather than stronger environmental filtering. These findings challenge correlative trait-environment relationships and call for more explicitly identifying the mechanisms responsible of trait convergence/divergence along environmental gradients.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaowei Li ◽  
Jianshuang Wu

The alpine grasslands on the Tibetan Plateau are sensitive and vulnerable to climate change. However, it is still unknown how precipitation use efficiency (PUE), the ratio of ANPP to precipitation, is related to community assembly of plant species, functional groups or traits for the Tibetan alpine grasslands along actual environmental gradients. We conducted a multi-site field survey at grazing-excluded pastures across meadow, steppe and desert-steppe to measure aboveground biomass in August, 2010. We used species richness, the Shannon diversity index, and cover-weighted functional group composition (FGC) of 1-xerophytes, 2-mesophytes, and 3-hygrophytes to describe community assembly at the species level; and chose community-level leaf area index (LAIc ), specific leaf area (SLAc ), and species-mixed foliar δ13C to quantify community assembly at the functional trait level. Our results showed that PUE decreased with increasing accumulated active temperatures (AccT) when daily temperature average is higher than 5°C, but increased with increasing climatic moisture index, which was demined as the ratio of growing season precipitation (GSP) to AccT. We also found that PUE increased with increasing species richness, the Shannon diversity index, FGC and LAIc ,decreased with increasing foliar δ13C, and had no relation with SLAc at the regional scale. Neither soil total nitrogen nor organic carbon has no influence on PUE at the regional scale. The community assembly of the Shannon index, LAIc and SLAc together accounted for 46.3 % of variance in PUE, whilst climatic moisture index accounted for 47.9 % of variance in PUE at the regional scale. This implies that community structural properties and plant functional traits can mediate the sensitivity of alpine grassland productivity in response to climate change. Thus, a long-term observation on community structural and functional changes is recommended for better understanding the response of alpine ecosystems to regional climate change on the Tibetan Plateau.


2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 762-773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luisa Conti ◽  
Francesco de Bello ◽  
Jan Lepš ◽  
Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta ◽  
Marta Carboni

PeerJ ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. e2680 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaowei Li ◽  
Jianshuang Wu

The alpine grasslands on the Tibetan Plateau are sensitive and vulnerable to climate change. However, it is still unknown how precipitation use efficiency (PUE), the ratio of aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP) to precipitation, is related to community assembly of plant species, functional groups or traits for the Tibetan alpine grasslands along actual environmental gradients. We conducted a multi-site field survey at grazing-excluded pastures across meadow, steppe and desert-steppe to measure aboveground biomass (AGB) in August, 2010. We used species richness (SR), the Shannon diversity index, and cover-weighted functional group composition (FGC) of 1-xerophytes, 2-mesophytes, and 3-hygrophytes to describe community assembly at the species level; and chose community-level leaf area index (LAIc), specific leaf area (SLAc), and species-mixed foliar δ13C to quantify community assembly at the functional trait level. Our results showed that PUE decreased with increasing accumulated active temperatures (AccT) when daily temperature average is higher than 5 °C, but increased with increasing climatic moisture index (CMI), which was demined as the ratio of growing season precipitation (GSP) to AccT. We also found that PUE increased with increasing SR, the Shannon diversity index, FGC and LAIc, decreased with increasing foliar δ13C, and had no relation with SLAcat the regional scale. Neither soil total nitrogen (STN) nor organic carbon has no influence on PUE at the regional scale. The community assembly of the Shannon index, LAIcand SLActogether accounted for 46.3% of variance in PUE, whilst CMI accounted for 47.9% of variance in PUE at the regional scale. This implies that community structural properties and plant functional traits can mediate the sensitivity of alpine grassland productivity in response to climate change. Thus, a long-term observation on community structural and functional changes is recommended for better understanding the response of alpine ecosystems to regional climate change on the Tibetan Plateau.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Éva Ács ◽  
Angéla Földi ◽  
Csaba Ferenc Vad ◽  
Zsuzsa Trábert ◽  
Keve Tihamér Kiss ◽  
...  

Abstract The stress dominance hypothesis (SDH) postulates that strong environmental gradients drive trait convergence in communities over limiting similarity. Previous studies, conducted mostly with terrestrial plant communities, found controversial evidence for this prediction. We provide here the first test for SDH for epiphytic diatoms. We studied community assembly in diatom communities of astatic ponds. These water bodies serve as a good model system for testing SDH because they exhibit stress gradients of various environmental factors. Functional diversity of diatom communities was assessed based on four traits: (1) combined trait reflecting the trade-off between stress tolerance and competitive dominance, (2) cell size, (3) oxygen requirement and (4) N-uptake strategy. According to our results, salinity, pH and the width of the macrophyte belt appeared as significant predictors of the trait convergence/divergence patterns presumably acting through influencing the availability of carbon dioxide and turbidity. Lower trait diversity was found in turbid, more saline and more alkaline ponds and functional diversity was higher in transparent, less saline and less alkaline ponds. Overall, our results supported the stress dominance hypothesis. In habitats representing increased environmental stress, environmental filtering was the most important community assembly rule, while limiting similarity became dominant under more favourable conditions.


Biotropica ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 44 (5) ◽  
pp. 668-679 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Kooyman ◽  
Maurizio Rossetto ◽  
Chris Allen ◽  
William Cornwell

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mansi Mungee ◽  
Ramana Athreya

AbstractRecent progress in functional ecology has advanced our understanding of the role of intraspecific (ITV) and interspecific (STV) trait variation in community assembly across environmental gradients. Studies on plant communities have generally found STV as the main driver of community trait variation, whereas ITV plays an important role in determining species co-existence and community assembly. However, similar studies of faunal taxa, especially invertebrates, are very few in number.We investigated variation of hawkmoth (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) traits along an environmental gradient spanning 2600 m in the eastern Himalayas and its role in community assembly, using the morpho-functional traits of body mass (BM), wing loading (WL) and wing aspect ratio (AR).We employ the recently proposed T-statistics to test for non-random assembly of hawkmoth communities and the relative importance of the two opposing forces for trait divergence (internal filters) and convergence (external filters).Community-wide trait-overlap decreased for all three traits with increasing environmental distance, suggesting the presence of elevation specific optimum morphology (i.e. functional response traits). Community weighted mean of BM and AR increased with elevation. Overall, the variation was dominated by species turnover but ITV accounted for 25%, 23% and <1% variability of BM, WL and AR, respectively. T-statistics, which incorporates ITV, revealed that elevational communities had a non-random trait distribution, and that community assembly was dominated by internal filtering throughout the gradient.This study was carried out using easily measurable morpho-traits obtained from calibrated field images of a large number (3301) of individuals. That these also happened to be important environmental response traits resulted in a significant signal in the metrics that we investigated. Such studies of abundant and hyperdiverse invertebrate groups across large environmental gradients should considerably improve our understanding of community assembly processes.


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