Hein Nils, Astrin Jonas J, Beckers Niklas, Giebner Hendrik, Langen Kathrin, Löffler Jörg, Misof Bernhard, Fonseca Vera G
Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change (LIB) Bonn Germany.
Department of Geography University of Bonn Bonn Germany.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Feb 9;14(2):e10969. doi: 10.1002/ece3.10969. eCollection 2024 Feb.
All ecosystems face ecological challenges in this century. Therefore, it is becoming increasingly important to understand the ecology and degree of local adaptation of functionally important Arctic-alpine biomes by looking at the most diverse taxon of metazoans: the Arthropoda. This is the first study to utilize metabarcoding in the Alpine tundra, providing insights into the effects of micro-environmental parameters on alpha- and beta-diversity of arthropods in such unique environments. To characterize arthropod diversity, pitfall traps were set at three middle-alpine sampling sites in the Scandinavian mountain range in Norway during the snow-free season in 2015. A metabarcoding approach was then used to determine the small-scale biodiversity patterns of arthropods in the Alpine tundra. All DNA was extracted directly from the preservative EtOH from 27 pitfall traps. In order to identify the controlling environmental conditions, all sampling locations were equipped with automatic data loggers for permanent measurement of the microenvironmental conditions. The variables measured were: air temperature [°C] at 15 cm height, soil temperature [°C] at 15 cm depth, and soil moisture [vol.%] at 15 cm depth. A total of 233 Arthropoda OTUs were identified. The number of unique OTUs found per sampling location (ridge, south-facing slope, and depression) was generally higher than the OTUs shared between the sampling locations, demonstrating that niche features greatly impact arthropod community structure. Our findings emphasize the fine-scale heterogeneity of arctic-alpine ecosystems and provide evidence for trait-based and niche-driven adaptation. The spatial and temporal differences in arthropod diversity were best explained by soil moisture and soil temperature at the respective locations. Furthermore, our results show that arthropod diversity is underestimated in alpine-tundra ecosystems using classical approaches and highlight the importance of integrating long-term functional environmental data and modern taxonomic techniques into biodiversity research to expand our ecological understanding of fine- and meso-scale biogeographical patterns.
本世纪,所有生态系统都面临着生态挑战。因此,通过研究后生动物中最多样化的分类群——节肢动物,来了解功能重要的北极 - 高山生物群落的生态及局部适应程度变得越来越重要。这是第一项在高山冻原利用代谢条形码技术的研究,为了解微环境参数对这种独特环境中节肢动物的α多样性和β多样性的影响提供了见解。为了描述节肢动物的多样性,2015年无雪季节期间,在挪威斯堪的纳维亚山脉的三个中高山采样点设置了陷阱诱捕器。然后采用代谢条形码方法来确定高山冻原节肢动物的小尺度生物多样性模式。所有DNA均直接从27个陷阱诱捕器中的防腐剂乙醇中提取。为了确定控制环境条件,所有采样地点都配备了自动数据记录器,用于长期测量微环境条件。测量的变量包括:15厘米高度处的气温[°C]、15厘米深度处的土壤温度[°C]以及15厘米深度处的土壤湿度[体积%]。共鉴定出233个节肢动物OTU。每个采样地点(山脊、朝南斜坡和洼地)发现的独特OTU数量通常高于采样地点之间共享的OTU数量,这表明生态位特征对节肢动物群落结构有很大影响。我们的研究结果强调了北极 - 高山生态系统的精细尺度异质性,并为基于性状和生态位驱动的适应提供了证据。节肢动物多样性的时空差异最好由各地点的土壤湿度和土壤温度来解释。此外,我们的结果表明,使用传统方法会低估高山冻原生态系统中的节肢动物多样性,并强调将长期功能环境数据和现代分类技术整合到生物多样性研究中的重要性,以扩展我们对精细和中尺度生物地理模式的生态理解。