Ruhí Albert, Boix Dani, Gascón Stéphanie, Sala Jordi, Batzer Darold P
Institute of Aquatic Ecology, University of Girona, Girona, Catalonia, Spain ; Catalan Institute for Water Research, Girona, Catalonia, Spain.
PLoS One. 2013 Nov 28;8(11):e81739. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0081739. eCollection 2013.
In freshwater ecosystems, species compositions are known to be determined hierarchically by large to small‑scale environmental factors, based on the biological traits of the organisms. However, in ephemeral habitats this heuristic framework remains largely untested. Although temporary wetland faunas are constrained by a local filter (i.e., desiccation), we propose its magnitude may still depend on large-scale climate characteristics. If this is true, climate should be related to the degree of functional and taxonomic relatedness of invertebrate communities inhabiting seasonal wetlands. We tested this hypothesis in two ways. First, based on 52 biological traits for invertebrates, we conducted a case study to explore functional trends among temperate seasonal wetlands differing in the harshness (i.e., dryness) of their dry season. After finding evidence of trait filtering, we addressed whether it could be generalized across a broader climatic scale. To this end, a meta-analysis (225 seasonal wetlands spread across broad climatic categories: Arid, Temperate, and Cold) allowed us to identify whether an equivalent climate-dependent pattern of trait richness was consistent between the Nearctic and the Western Palearctic. Functional overlap of invertebrates increased from mild (i.e., Temperate) to harsher climates (i.e., Arid and Cold), and phylogenetic clustering (using taxonomy as a surrogate) was highest in Arid and lowest in Temperate wetlands. We show that, (i) as has been described in streams, higher relatedness than would be expected by chance is generally observed in seasonal wetland invertebrate communities; and (ii) this relatedness is not constant but climate-dependent, with the climate under which a given seasonal wetland is located determining the functional overlap and the phylogenetic clustering of the community. Finally, using a space-for-time substitution approach we suggest our results may anticipate how the invertebrate biodiversity embedded in these vulnerable and often overlooked ecosystems will be affected by long-term climate change.
在淡水生态系统中,基于生物体的生物学特性,已知物种组成由大尺度到小尺度的环境因素分层决定。然而,在临时栖息地,这种启发式框架在很大程度上仍未得到检验。尽管临时湿地动物群受到局部筛选(即干燥)的限制,但我们认为其程度可能仍取决于大尺度气候特征。如果这是真的,那么气候应该与栖息在季节性湿地的无脊椎动物群落的功能和分类相关性程度相关。我们通过两种方式检验了这一假设。首先,基于无脊椎动物的52种生物学特性,我们进行了一项案例研究,以探索不同干季严酷程度(即干燥程度)的温带季节性湿地之间的功能趋势。在找到性状筛选的证据后,我们探讨了这一现象是否能在更广泛的气候尺度上得到推广。为此,一项荟萃分析(225个分布在广泛气候类别:干旱、温带和寒冷地区的季节性湿地)使我们能够确定在新北区和西古北区之间,是否存在与气候相关的等效性状丰富度模式。无脊椎动物的功能重叠从温和气候(即温带)向更严酷气候(即干旱和寒冷)增加,系统发育聚类(以分类学作为替代)在干旱湿地最高,在温带湿地最低。我们表明,(i)如在溪流中所描述的那样,在季节性湿地无脊椎动物群落中,通常观察到比随机预期更高的相关性;(ii)这种相关性不是恒定的,而是取决于气候,特定季节性湿地所处的气候决定了群落的功能重叠和系统发育聚类。最后,使用空间换时间替代方法,我们认为我们的结果可能预示着这些脆弱且常被忽视的生态系统中所包含的无脊椎动物生物多样性将如何受到长期气候变化的影响。