Eriksson Britas Klemens, Rubach Anja, Hillebrand Helmut
Institute for Botany, University of Cologne, Germany.
Ecology. 2006 Jan;87(1):246-54. doi: 10.1890/05-0090.
Canopy-forming plants and algae commonly contribute to spatial variation in habitat complexity for associated organisms and thereby create a biotic patchiness of communities. In this study, we tested for interaction effects between biotic habitat complexity and resource availability on net biomass production and species diversity of understory macroalgae by factorial field manipulations of light, nutrients, and algal canopy cover in a subtidal rocky-shore community. Presence of algal canopy cover and/or artificial shadings limited net biomass production and facilitated species diversity. Artificial shadings reduced light to levels similar to those under canopy cover, and net biomass production was significantly and positively correlated to light availability. Considering the comparable and dependent experimental effects from shadings and canopy cover, the results strongly suggest that canopy cover controlled net biomass production and species diversity by limiting light and thereby limiting resource availability for community production. Canopy cover also controlled experimental nutrient effects by preventing a significant increase in net biomass production from nutrient enrichment recorded in ambient light (no shading). Changes in species diversity were mediated by changes in species dominance patterns and species evenness, where canopy cover and shadings facilitated slow-growing crust-forming species and suppressed spatial dominance by Fucus vesiculosus, which was the main contributor to net production of algal biomass. The demonstrated impacts of biotic habitat complexity on biomass production and local diversity contribute significantly to understanding the importance of functionally important species and biodiversity for ecosystem processes. In particular, this study demonstrates how loss of a dominant species and decreased habitat complexity change the response of the remaining assembly to resource loading. This is of potential significance for marine conservation since resource loading often promotes low habitat complexity and canopy species are among the first groups lost in degraded aquatic systems.
形成冠层的植物和藻类通常会导致相关生物栖息地复杂性的空间变化,从而形成群落的生物斑块性。在本研究中,我们通过对潮下带岩石海岸群落中的光照、养分和藻类冠层覆盖进行析因田间操作,测试了生物栖息地复杂性和资源可用性对下层大型藻类净生物量生产和物种多样性的交互作用。藻类冠层覆盖和/或人工遮荫的存在限制了净生物量生产,并促进了物种多样性。人工遮荫将光照降低到与冠层覆盖下相似的水平,净生物量生产与光照可用性显著正相关。考虑到遮荫和冠层覆盖具有可比且相关的实验效果,结果强烈表明,冠层覆盖通过限制光照,进而限制群落生产的资源可用性,来控制净生物量生产和物种多样性。冠层覆盖还通过阻止在环境光(无遮荫)下记录到的养分富集导致的净生物量生产显著增加,来控制实验养分效应。物种多样性的变化是由物种优势模式和物种均匀度的变化介导的,其中冠层覆盖和遮荫促进了生长缓慢的结壳物种,并抑制了囊藻对空间的主导作用,囊藻是藻类生物量净生产的主要贡献者。生物栖息地复杂性对生物量生产和局部多样性的已证明影响,对理解功能重要物种和生物多样性对生态系统过程的重要性有显著贡献。特别是,本研究展示了优势物种的丧失和栖息地复杂性的降低如何改变剩余群落对资源负荷的响应。这对海洋保护具有潜在意义,因为资源负荷往往会导致栖息地复杂性降低,而冠层物种是退化水生系统中最早消失的群体之一。