Department of Aquatic Ecology, Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Dübendorf, Switzerland
Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland.
Proc Biol Sci. 2018 Apr 11;285(1876). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2018.0205.
Abiotic conditions have long been considered essential in structuring freshwater macroinvertebrate communities. Ecological drift, dispersal and biotic interactions also structure communities, and although these mechanisms are more difficult to detect, they may be of equal importance in natural communities. Here, we hypothesized that in 10 naturally replicated headwater streams in eastern Switzerland, locally dominant amphipod species would be associated with differences in environmental conditions. We conducted repeated surveys of amphipods and used a hierarchical joint species distribution model to assess the influence of different drivers on species co-occurrences. The species had unique environmental requirements, but a distinct spatial structure in their distributions was unrelated to habitat. Species co-occurred much less frequently than predicted by the model, which was surprising because laboratory and field evidence suggests they are capable of coexisting in equal densities. We suggest that niche preemption may limit their distribution and that a blocking effect related to the specific linear configuration of streams determines which species colonizes and dominates a given stream catchment, thus suggesting a new solution a long-standing conundrum in freshwater ecology.
长期以来,非生物条件被认为是构成淡水大型无脊椎动物群落的重要因素。生态漂移、扩散和生物相互作用也构成了群落,尽管这些机制更难察觉,但它们在自然群落中可能同样重要。在这里,我们假设在瑞士东部的 10 个自然复制的源头溪流中,本地占优势的片脚类动物物种将与环境条件的差异相关。我们对片脚类动物进行了重复调查,并使用分层联合物种分布模型来评估不同驱动因素对物种共存的影响。这些物种具有独特的环境要求,但它们的分布存在明显的空间结构,与栖息地无关。物种的共存频率远低于模型预测的频率,这令人惊讶,因为实验室和现场证据表明它们能够以相等的密度共存。我们认为,生态位侵占可能限制了它们的分布,而与溪流特定线性配置有关的阻断效应决定了哪些物种能够在给定的溪流流域中定殖和占主导地位,从而为淡水生态学中一个长期存在的难题提供了一个新的解决方案。