Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, China.
Department of Biodiversity and Environmental Management, University of León, Campus de Vegazana, 24007, León, Spain; Geography Research Unit, University of Oulu, P.O. Box 3000, FI-90014, Oulu, Finland.
Environ Res. 2024 Jun 15;251(Pt 2):118746. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2024.118746. Epub 2024 Mar 19.
Understanding the relative role of dispersal dynamics and niche constraints is not only a core task in community ecology, but also becomes an important prerequisite for bioassessment. Despite the recent progress in our knowledge of community assembly in space and time, patterns and processes underlying biotic communities in alpine glacierized catchments remain mostly ignored. To fill this knowledge gap, we combined the recently proposed dispersal-niche continuum index (DNCI) with traditional constrained ordinations and idealized patterns of species distributions to unravel community assembly mechanisms of different key groups of primary producers and consumers (i.e., phytoplankton, epiphytic algae, zooplankton, macroinvertebrates, and fishes) in rivers in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, the World's Third Pole. We tested whether organismal groups with contrasting body sizes differed in their assembly processes, and discussed their applicability in bioassessment in alpine zones. We found that community structure of alpine river biotas was always predominantly explained in terms of dispersal dynamics and historical biogeography. These patterns are most likely the result of differences in species-specific functional attributes, the stochastic colonization-extinction dynamics driven by multi-year glacier disturbances and the repeated hydrodynamic separation among alpine catchments after the rising of the Qilian mountains. Additionally, we found that the strength of dispersal dynamics and niche constraints was partially mediated by organismal body sizes, with dispersal processes being more influential for microscopic primary producers. Finding that zooplankton and macroinvertebrate communities followed clumped species replacement structures (i.e., Clementsian gradients) supports the notion that environmental filtering also contributes to the structure of high-altitude animal communities in glacierized catchments. In terms of the applied fields, we argue that freshwater bioassessment in glacierized catchments can benefit from incorporating the metacommunity perspective and applying novel approaches to (i) detect the optimal spatial scale for species sorting and (ii) identify and eliminate the species that are sensitive to dispersal-related processes.
理解扩散动态和生态位限制的相对作用不仅是群落生态学的核心任务,也是生物评估的重要前提。尽管我们在时空上对群落组装的认识最近取得了进展,但高山冰川流域生物群落的模式和过程在很大程度上仍未被关注。为了填补这一知识空白,我们将最近提出的扩散-生态位连续统指数(DNCI)与传统的约束排序和理想化的物种分布模式相结合,以揭示青藏高原河流中不同关键初级生产者和消费者(即浮游植物、附生藻类、浮游动物、大型无脊椎动物和鱼类)群落组装机制。我们测试了具有不同体型的生物组在组装过程中是否存在差异,并讨论了它们在高山地区生物评估中的适用性。我们发现,高山河流生物群落的结构总是主要由扩散动态和历史生物地理学来解释。这些模式很可能是物种特异性功能属性的差异、多年冰川干扰驱动的随机定居-灭绝动态以及祁连山抬升后高山流域之间反复的水动力分离的结果。此外,我们发现,扩散动态和生态位限制的强度部分由生物体的体型介导,扩散过程对微观初级生产者的影响更大。发现浮游动物和大型无脊椎动物群落遵循聚集物种替代结构(即克莱门茨梯度),这支持了环境过滤也有助于冰川流域高海拔动物群落结构的观点。就应用领域而言,我们认为,在冰川流域进行淡水生物评估可以受益于纳入集合群落观点和应用新方法来(i)检测物种分选的最佳空间尺度,以及(ii)识别和消除对扩散相关过程敏感的物种。