Centre for Ecological Research, GINOP Sustainable Ecosystems Group, Klebelsberg K. u. 3, Tihany, H-8237, Hungary.
Centre for Ecological Research, Balaton Limnological Institute, Klebelsberg K. u. 3, Tihany, H-8237, Hungary.
Ecol Appl. 2021 Jun;31(4):e2293. doi: 10.1002/eap.2293. Epub 2021 Mar 4.
A fundamental goal of community ecology is to understand species-habitat relationships and how they shape metacommunity structure. Recent advances in occupancy modeling enable habitat relationships to be assessed for both common and rare species within metacommunities using multi-species occupancy models (MSOM). These models account for imperfect species detection and offer considerable advantages over other analytical tools commonly used for community analyses under the elements of metacommunity structure (EMS) framework. Here, we demonstrate that MSOM can be used to infer habitat relationships and test metacommunity theory, using amphibians. Repeated frog surveys were undertaken at 55 wetland sites in southeastern Australia. We detected 11 frog species from three families (Limnodynastidae, Myobatrachidae, and Pelodryadidae). The rarest species was detected at only one site whereas the most common species was detected at 42 sites (naive occupancy rate 0.02-0.76). Two models were assessed representing two competing hypotheses; the best-supported model included the covariates distance to the nearest site (connectivity), wetland area, presence of the non-native eastern mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki), proportion cover of emergent vegetation, an interaction term between Gambusia and emergent vegetation cover, and the proportion canopy cover over a site. Hydroperiod played no detectable role in metacommunity structure. We found species-habitat relationships that fit with current metacommunity theory: occupancy increased with wetland area and connectivity. There was a strong negative relationship between occupancy and the presence of predatory Gambusia, and a positive interaction between Gambusia and emergent vegetation. The presence of canopy cover strongly increased occupancy for several tree frog species, highlighting the importance of terrestrial habitat for amphibian community structure. We demonstrated how responses by amphibians to environmental covariates at the species level can be linked to occupancy patterns at the metacommunity scale. Our results have clear management implications: wetland restoration projects for amphibians and likely other taxa should maximize wetland area and connectivity, establish partial canopy cover, and eradicate Gambusia or provide aquatic vegetation to mitigate the impact of this non-native fish. We strongly advocate the use of MSOM to elucidate the habitat drivers behind animal occupancy patterns and to derive unbiased occupancy estimates for monitoring programs.
社区生态学的一个基本目标是了解物种-栖息地关系以及它们如何塑造复合种群结构。最近在占有模型方面的进展使我们能够使用多物种占有模型(MSOM)评估复合种群中常见和稀有物种的栖息地关系。这些模型考虑到了物种检测的不完美性,并与复合种群结构要素(EMS)框架下常用的其他分析工具相比具有相当大的优势。在这里,我们展示了如何使用 MSOM 来推断两栖动物的栖息地关系并检验复合种群理论。在澳大利亚东南部的 55 个湿地地点进行了重复的青蛙调查。我们从三个科(Limnodynastidae、Myobatrachidae 和 Pelodryadidae)中检测到了 11 种青蛙。最稀有的物种仅在一个地点被检测到,而最常见的物种在 42 个地点被检测到(幼稚占有率为 0.02-0.76)。评估了两种代表两种竞争假说的模型;最支持的模型包括最近的站点(连通性)距离、湿地面积、非本地东部食蚊鱼(Gambusia holbrooki)的存在、挺水植被覆盖率、Gambusia 和挺水植被覆盖率之间的交互项以及站点的冠层覆盖率。水期在复合种群结构中没有可检测到的作用。我们发现的物种-栖息地关系符合当前的复合种群理论:占有随着湿地面积和连通性的增加而增加。占有与捕食性 Gambusia 的存在呈强烈负相关,Gambusia 与挺水植被之间呈正交互作用。冠层覆盖的存在强烈增加了几种树蛙物种的占有,突出了陆地栖息地对两栖动物群落结构的重要性。我们展示了如何将两栖动物对物种层面环境协变量的反应与复合种群尺度的占有模式联系起来。我们的研究结果具有明确的管理意义:对于两栖动物和可能的其他分类群,湿地恢复项目应最大限度地扩大湿地面积和连通性,建立部分冠层覆盖,并根除 Gambusia 或提供水生植被,以减轻这种非本地鱼类的影响。我们强烈主张使用 MSOM 来阐明动物占有模式背后的栖息地驱动因素,并为监测计划提供无偏的占有估计。