Department of Geology, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, Washington 98416, USA.
Ecology. 2010 May;91(5):1296-307. doi: 10.1890/09-0653.1.
The mechanisms by which even the clearest of keystone or dominant species exert community-wide effects are only partially understood in most ecosystems. This is especially true when a species or guild influences community-wide interactions via changes in the abiotic landscape. Using stable isotope analyses, we show that subterranean termites in an East African savanna strongly influence a key ecosystem process: atmospheric nitrogen fixation by a monodominant tree species and its bacterial symbionts. Specifically, we applied the 15N natural abundance method in combination with other biogeochemical analyses to assess levels of nitrogen fixation by Acacia drepanolobium and its effects on co-occurring grasses and forbs in areas near and far from mounds and where ungulates were or were not excluded. We find that termites exert far stronger effects than do herbivores on nitrogen fixation. The percentage of nitrogen derived from fixation in Acacia drepanolobium trees is higher (55-80%) away from mounds vs. near mounds (40-50%). Mound soils have higher levels of plant available nitrogen, and Acacia drepanolobium may preferentially utilize soil-based nitrogen sources in lieu of fixed nitrogen when these sources are readily available near termite mounds. At the scale of the landscape, our models predict that termite/soil derived nitrogen sources influence >50% of the Acacia drepanolobium trees in our system. Further, the spatial extent of these effects combine with the spacing of termite mounds to create highly regular patterning in nitrogen fixation rates, resulting in marked habitat heterogeneity in an otherwise uniform landscape. In summary, we show that termite-associated effects on nitrogen processes are not only stronger than those of more apparent large herbivores in the same system, but also occur in a highly regular spatial pattern, potentially adding to their importance as drivers of community and ecosystem structure.
在大多数生态系统中,即使是最清晰的关键或优势物种,其对群落范围产生影响的机制也只是部分被理解。当一个物种或类群通过改变非生物景观来影响群落范围的相互作用时,情况尤其如此。使用稳定同位素分析,我们表明,东非稀树草原中的地下白蚁强烈影响着一个关键的生态系统过程:单优树种及其细菌共生体的大气氮固定。具体来说,我们应用 15N 自然丰度法结合其他生物地球化学分析,评估 Acacia drepanolobium 的氮固定水平及其对近堆和远堆以及有无有蹄类动物存在地区的共存草和杂草的影响。我们发现,白蚁对氮固定的影响远远大于食草动物。远离蚁丘的 Acacia drepanolobium 树木中来自固定氮的氮比例较高(55-80%),而靠近蚁丘的树木中则较低(40-50%)。蚁丘土壤中植物可利用氮的水平较高,并且当这些氮源在靠近白蚁蚁丘的地方容易获得时,Acacia drepanolobium 可能会优先利用土壤中的氮源,而不是固定氮。在景观尺度上,我们的模型预测,白蚁/土壤衍生的氮源影响我们系统中超过 50%的 Acacia drepanolobium 树木。此外,这些影响的空间范围与白蚁蚁丘的间距相结合,导致氮固定率呈现出高度规则的模式,从而在原本均匀的景观中产生明显的栖息地异质性。总之,我们表明,与同一系统中更明显的大型食草动物相比,白蚁相关的氮过程影响不仅更强,而且还呈现出高度规则的空间模式,这可能增加了它们作为群落和生态系统结构驱动因素的重要性。