Museum of Southwestern Biology and Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Oecologia. 2021 Feb;195(2):435-451. doi: 10.1007/s00442-021-04854-6. Epub 2021 Jan 23.
Turnover in species composition between sites, or beta diversity, is a critical component of species diversity that is typically influenced by geography, environment, and biotic interactions. Quantifying turnover is particularly challenging, however, in multi-host, multi-parasite assemblages where undersampling is unavoidable, resulting in inflated estimates of turnover and uncertainty about its spatial scale. We developed and implemented a framework using null models to test for community turnover in avian haemosporidian communities of three sky islands in the southwestern United States. We screened 776 birds for haemosporidian parasites from three genera (Parahaemoproteus, Plasmodium, and Leucocytozoon) by amplifying and sequencing a mitochondrial DNA barcode. We detected infections in 280 birds (36.1%), sequenced 357 infections, and found a total of 99 parasite haplotypes. When compared to communities simulated from a regional pool, we observed more unique, single-mountain haplotypes and fewer haplotypes shared among three mountain ranges than expected, indicating that haemosporidian communities differ to some degree among adjacent mountain ranges. These results were robust even after pruning datasets to include only identical sets of host species, and they were consistent for two of the three haemosporidian genera. The two more distant mountain ranges were more similar to each other than the one located centrally, suggesting that the differences we detected were due to stochastic colonization-extirpation dynamics. These results demonstrate that avian haemosporidian communities of temperate-zone forests differ on relatively fine spatial scales between adjacent sky islands. Null models are essential tools for testing the spatial scale of turnover in complex, undersampled, and poorly known systems.
生境内物种组成的变化(即β多样性)是物种多样性的一个关键组成部分,通常受到地理、环境和生物相互作用的影响。然而,在多宿主、多寄生虫组合中,量化物种组成变化特别具有挑战性,因为不可避免地会出现抽样不足的情况,这导致物种组成变化的估计值膨胀,并且对其空间尺度存在不确定性。我们开发并实施了一个使用零模型的框架,以测试美国西南部三个天空岛屿上的鸟类血孢子虫群落的群落变化。我们通过扩增和测序线粒体 DNA 条码,从三个属(疟原虫、疟原虫和白细胞虫)筛选了 776 只鸟类的血孢子虫寄生虫。我们在 280 只鸟类(36.1%)中检测到感染,对 357 个感染进行了测序,共发现 99 个寄生虫单倍型。与从区域池模拟的群落相比,我们观察到更多独特的、单一山脉的单倍型,而在三个山脉之间共享的单倍型较少,这表明血孢子虫群落在一定程度上在相邻山脉之间存在差异。即使在修剪数据集以仅包含相同的宿主物种集后,这些结果仍然是稳健的,并且对于三个血孢子虫属中的两个属都是如此。两个更远的山脉彼此之间比位于中心的山脉更相似,这表明我们检测到的差异是由于随机的殖民化-灭绝动态造成的。这些结果表明,温带森林的鸟类血孢子虫群落之间在相邻天空岛屿之间的相对较小的空间尺度上存在差异。零模型是测试复杂、抽样不足和了解甚少的系统中物种组成变化空间尺度的重要工具。