Pintar Matthew R, Resetarits William J
Department of Biology and Center for Water and Wetland Resources, University of Mississippi, University, MS, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2017 Sep;86(5):1124-1135. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12697. Epub 2017 Jun 26.
Habitat selection by colonizing organisms is an important factor in determining species abundance and community dynamics at multiple spatial scales. Many organisms select habitat patches based on intrinsic patch quality, but patches exist in complex landscapes linked by dispersal and colonization, forming metapopulations and metacommunities. Perceived patch quality can be influenced by neighbouring patches through spatial contagion, wherein perceived quality of one patch can extend beyond its borders and either increase or decrease the colonization of neighbouring patches and localities. These spatially explicit colonization dynamics can result in habitat compression, wherein more colonists occupy a patch or locality than in the absence of spatial context dependence. Previous work on contagion/compression focused primarily on the role of predators in driving colonization patterns. Our goal was to determine whether resource abundance can drive multi-scale colonization dynamics of aquatic beetles through the processes of contagion and compression in naturally colonized experimental pools. We established two levels (high/low quality) of within-patch resource abundances (leaf litter) using an experimental landscape of mesocosms, and assayed colonization by 35 species of aquatic beetles. Patches were arranged in localities (sets of two patches), which consisted of a combination of two patch-level resource levels in a 2 × 2 factorial design, allowing us to assay colonization at both locality and patch levels. We demonstrate that patterns of species abundance and richness of colonizing aquatic beetles are determined by patch quality and context-dependent processes at multiple spatial scales. Localities that consisted of at least one high-quality patch were colonized at equivalent rates that were higher than localities containing only low-quality patches, displaying regional reward contagion. In localities that consisted of one high- and one low-quality patch, reward contagion produced by higher leaf litter levels resulted in greater abundance of beetles in such localities, which then compressed into the highest quality patches. Our results provide further support for the critical roles of habitat selection and spatial context, particularly the quality of neighbouring habitat patches, in generating patterns of species abundances and community structure across landscapes.
定殖生物的栖息地选择是在多个空间尺度上决定物种丰富度和群落动态的一个重要因素。许多生物根据斑块的内在质量来选择栖息地斑块,但斑块存在于通过扩散和定殖相互连接的复杂景观中,形成集合种群和集合群落。感知到的斑块质量会受到相邻斑块的空间传染影响,即一个斑块的感知质量可以延伸到其边界之外,从而增加或减少相邻斑块和区域的定殖。这些空间明确的定殖动态会导致栖息地压缩,即与不存在空间背景依赖性时相比,更多的定殖者占据一个斑块或区域。先前关于传染/压缩的研究主要集中在捕食者在驱动定殖模式中的作用。我们的目标是确定资源丰度是否能通过自然定殖的实验水池中的传染和压缩过程,驱动水生甲虫的多尺度定殖动态。我们使用中型生态系统的实验景观,建立了斑块内资源丰度(落叶层)的两个水平(高/低质量),并对35种水生甲虫的定殖情况进行了测定。斑块被安排在区域(每组两个斑块)中,区域由两个斑块水平资源水平的组合构成,采用2×2析因设计,使我们能够在区域和斑块水平上测定定殖情况。我们证明,定殖水生甲虫的物种丰富度和丰度模式是由多个空间尺度上的斑块质量和背景依赖性过程决定的。至少包含一个高质量斑块的区域的定殖率相当,高于仅包含低质量斑块的区域,显示出区域奖励传染。在由一个高质量和一个低质量斑块组成的区域中,较高落叶层水平产生的奖励传染导致该区域甲虫数量更多,然后这些甲虫集中到最高质量的斑块中。我们的结果进一步支持了栖息地选择和空间背景,特别是相邻栖息地斑块质量,在形成景观中物种丰度模式和群落结构方面的关键作用。