Irving Andrew D, Connell Sean D
Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, DP 418, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, 5005, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Oecologia. 2006 Jun;148(3):491-502. doi: 10.1007/s00442-006-0389-0. Epub 2006 Feb 24.
Assembly rules provide a useful framework for predicting patterns of community assembly under defined environmental conditions. Habitat created by canopy-forming algae (such as kelps) provides a promising system for identifying assembly rules because canopies typically have a large and predictable influence on understorey communities. Across >1,000 km of subtidal South Australian coastline, we identified natural associations between assemblages of understorey algae and (1) monospecific canopies of Ecklonia radiata, (2) canopies comprised of E. radiata mixed with Fucales (Cystophora spp. and Sargassum spp.), and (3) gaps among canopies of algae. We were able to recreate these associations with experimental tests that quantified the assembly of understorey algae among these three habitat types. We propose the assembly rule that understorey communities on subtidal rocky coast in South Australia will be (1) monopolised by encrusting coralline algae beneath monospecific canopies of E. radiata, (2) comprised of encrusting corallines, encrusting non-corallines, and sparse covers of articulated corallines, beneath mixed E. radiata-Fucales canopies, and (3) comprised of extensive covers of articulated corallines and filamentous turfs, as well as sparse covers of foliose algae and juvenile canopy-formers, within gaps. Consistencies between natural patterns and experimental effects demonstrate how algal canopies can act as a filter to limit the subsets of species from the locally available pool that are able to assemble beneath them. Moreover, the subsets of species that assemble to subtidal rocky substrata in South Australia appear to be predictable, given knowledge of the presence and composition of canopies incorporating E. radiata.
组装规则为预测特定环境条件下群落组装模式提供了一个有用的框架。由形成冠层的藻类(如海带)创造的栖息地为识别组装规则提供了一个很有前景的系统,因为冠层通常对下层群落有重大且可预测的影响。沿着南澳大利亚超过1000公里的潮下带海岸线,我们确定了下层藻类组合与以下三者之间的自然关联:(1)辐射昆布的单物种冠层;(2)由辐射昆布与墨角藻目(囊状藻属和马尾藻属)混合组成的冠层;(3)藻类冠层之间的间隙。我们能够通过实验测试重现这些关联,这些实验测试量化了这三种栖息地类型中下层藻类的组装情况。我们提出以下组装规则:南澳大利亚潮下带岩石海岸的下层群落将(1)在辐射昆布的单物种冠层之下被覆盖型珊瑚藻占据;(2)在辐射昆布 - 墨角藻目混合冠层之下由覆盖型珊瑚藻、覆盖型非珊瑚藻以及稀疏的关节状珊瑚藻组成;(3)在间隙内由大量的关节状珊瑚藻和丝状草皮,以及叶状藻类和幼年冠层形成者的稀疏覆盖组成。自然模式与实验结果之间的一致性表明藻类冠层如何作为一个过滤器,限制能够在其下方组装的当地可用物种库中的物种子集。此外,鉴于了解包含辐射昆布的冠层的存在和组成,在南澳大利亚组装到潮下带岩石基质上的物种子集似乎是可预测的。