School of Biology, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Fife KY16 8LB, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2012 Sep 22;279(1743):3722-6. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2012.1379. Epub 2012 Jul 11.
How do species divide resources to produce the characteristic species abundance distributions seen in nature? One way to resolve this problem is to examine how the biomass (or capacity) of the spatial guilds that combine to produce an abundance distribution is allocated among species. Here we argue that selection on body size varies across guilds occupying spatially distinct habitats. Using an exceptionally well-characterized estuarine fish community, we show that biomass is concentrated in large bodied species in guilds where habitat structure provides protection from predators, but not in those guilds associated with open habitats and where safety in numbers is a mechanism for reducing predation risk. We further demonstrate that while there is temporal turnover in the abundances and identities of species that comprise these guilds, guild rank order is conserved across our 30-year time series. These results demonstrate that ecological communities are not randomly assembled but can be decomposed into guilds where capacity is predictably allocated among species.
物种如何分配资源以产生自然界中观察到的特征物种丰度分布?解决这个问题的一种方法是研究组合产生丰度分布的空间 guild 的生物量(或容量)如何在物种间分配。在这里,我们认为体型选择在占据空间上不同生境的 guild 之间是不同的。使用一个异常特征化的河口鱼类群落,我们表明,在生境结构为捕食者提供保护的 guild 中,生物量集中在体型较大的物种中,但在与开阔生境相关的 guild 中则不然,在这些 guild 中,数量安全是减少捕食风险的一种机制。我们进一步证明,尽管组成这些 guild 的物种的丰度和身份存在时间上的变化,但 guild 的等级顺序在我们 30 年的时间序列中是保持不变的。这些结果表明,生态群落不是随机组装的,而是可以分解为 guild,其中容量在物种之间可预测地分配。