Margaret Palmer is at the Dept of Zoology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
Trends Ecol Evol. 1996 Aug;11(8):322-6. doi: 10.1016/0169-5347(96)10038-0.
Recent work has shown that benthic invertebrate assemblages may be influenced in an ongoing fashion by dispersal. Water-column movements of meiofauna, juvenile insects and marine postlarvae are common and can act to alter greatly local dynamics such as predator-prey and competitive interactions in marine and stream ecosystems. These findings are important because past research on the role of dispersal in invertebrate dynamics has focused almost exclusively on how planktonic larval supply influences the establishment and maintenance of local assemblages, on the colonization of newly opened sites, or on the settlement success of new recruits. The emerging framework is that dispersal needs to be viewed as a regional process that may routinely influence local benthic dynamics, because fauna can move to and from water-column dispersal 'pools' and may do so at frequent intervals.
最近的研究表明,底栖无脊椎动物群落可能会受到扩散的持续影响。海洋后生幼体和小型无脊椎动物幼虫的水柱运动很常见,它们可以极大地改变海洋和溪流生态系统中的局部动态,如捕食者-猎物和竞争相互作用。这些发现很重要,因为过去关于扩散在无脊椎动物动态中的作用的研究几乎完全集中在浮游幼虫供应如何影响局部群落的建立和维持、新开放地点的殖民化或新入伍人员的定居成功率上。新兴的框架是,扩散需要被视为一个区域过程,它可能经常影响当地的底栖动态,因为动物可以在水柱扩散“池”中往返移动,并且可能会频繁地这样做。