Deane David C, Hui Cang, McGeoch Melodie
Department of Environment and Genetics, Research Centre for Future Landscapes La Trobe University Melbourne Victoria Australia.
Department of Mathematical Sciences, Centre for Invasion Biology Stellenbosch University Matieland South Africa.
Ecol Evol. 2023 Mar 8;13(3):e9859. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9859. eCollection 2023 Mar.
The number of species shared by two or more sites is a fundamental measure of spatial variation in species composition. As more sites are included in the comparison of species composition, the average number of species shared across them declines, with a rate increasingly dependent on only the most widespread species. In over 80% of empirical communities, models of decline in shared species across multiple sites (multisite similarity decline) follow one of two distinct forms. An exponential form is assumed to reflect stochastic assembly and a power law form niche-based sorting, yet these explanations are largely untested, and little is known of how the two forms arise in nature. Using simulations, we first show that the distribution of the most widespread species largely differentiates the two forms, with the power law increasingly favored where such species occupy more than ~75% of sites. We reasoned the less cosmopolitan distribution of widespread species within exponential communities would manifest as differences in community biodiversity properties, specifically more aggregated within-species distributions, less even relative abundance distributions, and weaker between-species spatial associations. We tested and largely confirmed these relationships using 80 empirical datasets, suggesting that the form of multisite similarity decline offers a basis to predict how landscape-scale loss or gain of widespread species is reflected in different local-scale community structures. Such understanding could, for example, be used to predict changes in local-scale competitive interactions following shifts in widespread species' distributions. We propose multiple explanations for the origin of exponential decline, including high among-site abiotic variation, sampling of highly specialized (narrow niche width) taxa, and strong dispersal limitation. We recommend these are evaluated as alternative hypotheses to stochastic assembly.
两个或更多地点共有的物种数量是物种组成空间变异的一项基本衡量指标。在物种组成比较中纳入的地点越多,它们共有的物种平均数量就会下降,下降速率越来越仅取决于分布最广泛的物种。在超过80%的实证群落中,多个地点间共有物种数量下降的模型(多地点相似性下降)呈现两种不同形式之一。指数形式被认为反映随机组装,幂律形式反映基于生态位的分选,但这些解释在很大程度上未经检验,而且对于这两种形式在自然界中如何产生知之甚少。通过模拟,我们首先表明分布最广泛的物种的分布在很大程度上区分了这两种形式,在幂律形式中,这类物种占据超过约75%的地点时更受青睐。我们推断,在指数群落中分布广泛的物种的分布范围较窄,这将表现为群落生物多样性属性的差异,具体而言,物种内分布更聚集、相对丰度分布更不均匀,以及物种间空间关联更弱。我们使用80个实证数据集对这些关系进行了检验并在很大程度上得到了证实,这表明多地点相似性下降的形式为预测景观尺度上广泛分布物种的丧失或增加如何反映在不同的局部尺度群落结构中提供了一个基础。例如,这种理解可用于预测广泛分布物种分布变化后局部尺度竞争相互作用的变化。我们针对指数下降的起源提出了多种解释,包括高地点间非生物变异、高度特化(生态位宽度窄)类群的采样,以及强烈的扩散限制。我们建议将这些作为随机组装的替代假设进行评估。