Department of Ecology, Environment and Evolution, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Desert Ecology Research Group, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
J Anim Ecol. 2019 Oct;88(10):1549-1563. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13052. Epub 2019 Jul 16.
Productivity is a key driver of ecosystem structure and function, so long-term studies are critical to understanding ecosystems with high temporal variation in productivity. In some deserts, productivity, driven by moisture availability, varies immensely over time (rainfall) and space (landscape factors). At high productivity, species richness is expected to be driven in opposing directions by abundance (More Individuals Hypothesis - MIH) and competition. While studies investigating the impacts of spatial variation in productivity on community structure are common, the impacts of temporal variability on productivity are poorly understood. We tested how well rainfall predicted the activity, species numbers and assemblage composition of ants and if responses were moderated by landscape position. We also asked whether the number of species (richness per sampling unit and estimated species richness) responded directly to rainfall or was moderated by ant activity or competition from dominant ants. Over a 22-year period, when annual rainfall fluctuated between 79 mm and 570 mm, we sampled ants using pitfall traps in paired dune and swale habitats in the Simpson Desert, Australia. We used climate records over this period to model changes in ant assemblages. Activity of dominant ants responded primarily to long-term rainfall, increasing exponentially, while subordinate ants responded to short-term weather and time. Consistent with the MIH, the number of ant species was best predicted by activity, particularly that of subordinate ants. Activity of dominant ants had a declining positive effect on numbers of species. Landscape position strongly predicted species composition, while long-term rainfall determined composition at genus level but not species level. Over time, species composition fluctuated, but several genera consistently increased in activity. Productivity moderators such as long-term rainfall and landscape position are key drivers of ant activity and composition in the study ecosystem, acting indirectly on numbers of species. Numbers of species were explained largely by ant activity, making a strong case for the MIH, but not competition. Longer periods of low rainfall may indirectly reduce species richness in desert ecosystems. However, a trend to increasing richness over time may indicate that conservation management can ameliorate this impact.
生产力是生态系统结构和功能的关键驱动因素,因此长期研究对于理解生产力随时间高度变化的生态系统至关重要。在某些沙漠中,生产力受水分供应的驱动,在时间(降雨)和空间(景观因素)上变化巨大。在高生产力下,物种丰富度预计将受到丰度(更多个体假说-MIH)和竞争的相反方向的驱动。虽然研究调查生产力空间变化对群落结构的影响很常见,但对生产力时间变化的影响知之甚少。我们测试了降雨对蚂蚁活动、物种数量和组合组成的预测能力,以及景观位置是否会调节这些影响。我们还询问了物种数量(每个采样单位的丰富度和估计的物种丰富度)是否直接响应降雨,或者是否受到蚂蚁活动或优势蚂蚁竞争的调节。在 22 年的时间里,当每年的降雨量在 79 毫米到 570 毫米之间波动时,我们在澳大利亚辛普森沙漠的沙丘和洼地生境中使用陷阱陷阱对蚂蚁进行了采样。我们在这段时间内使用气候记录来模拟蚂蚁群落的变化。优势蚂蚁的活动主要响应长期降雨,呈指数增长,而次要蚂蚁则响应短期天气和时间。与 MIH 一致,蚂蚁物种的数量主要由活动预测,特别是次要蚂蚁的活动。优势蚂蚁的活动对物种数量有正的下降效应。景观位置强烈预测物种组成,而长期降雨决定属水平的组成,但不决定种水平的组成。随着时间的推移,物种组成波动,但有几个属的活动持续增加。生产力调节剂,如长期降雨和景观位置,是研究生态系统中蚂蚁活动和组成的关键驱动因素,对物种数量间接起作用。物种数量主要由蚂蚁活动解释,这强烈支持 MIH,但不支持竞争。较长时间的低降雨可能会间接降低沙漠生态系统的物种丰富度。然而,随着时间的推移,丰富度呈上升趋势,这表明保护管理可以减轻这种影响。