Sánchez González Irene, Hopper Garrett W, Bucholz Jamie R, Lozier Jeffrey D, Atkinson Carla L
Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30601, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, 35401, USA.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2025 Oct;100(5):2150-2166. doi: 10.1111/brv.70040. Epub 2025 May 29.
Trait-based approaches have emerged as a general framework that translates species-specific knowledge to understand the processes driving patterns of diversity and distributions. Morphological traits are relatively easy to measure and can provide information on organism-environment interactions and community structure due to their close linkage to ecological function and habitat partitioning. Freshwater mussels (Family: Unionidae) are a diverse (~360 North American species) and endangered group of organisms. Mussels display great interspecific morphological variation potentially yielding broad ecological implications. We aimed to modify quantitively an existing shell morphological classification system by combining size, shape, and sculpturing data using a robust data set of 1362 individuals representing 64 species spanning a broad cross section of the diverse North American freshwater mussel fauna. Using multivariate techniques, we classified species into morphological classes based on trait similarities hypothesized to explain species distributions and habitat associations. We then tested how well the classification system predicted trait-environment relationships using quantitative mussel survey data with paired environmental data collected at three spatial scales [river (km), reach (40-150 m), patch (0.25 m)]. Mussel species clustered into six different morphological classes based on sculpturing, shape, and body size traits. We found associations between morphological classes and environmental parameters at each spatial scale. The modified classification explained more variation in community distribution as predicted by abiotic variables than previous frameworks. Our study underscores the value of morphological traits in predicting species distributions and understanding mechanisms of community assembly and we provide a foundation for fellow researchers to expand our morphological classification. This knowledge has significant implications for mussel conservation and management, as it helps identify suitable habitats that can guide reintroduction strategies through incorporating multiple spatial scales, a broad representation of species and geographical distribution and a wide suite of morphological traits.
基于性状的方法已成为一个通用框架,可将物种特异性知识转化为理解驱动多样性和分布格局的过程。形态性状相对易于测量,由于它们与生态功能和栖息地划分密切相关,因此可以提供有关生物与环境相互作用以及群落结构的信息。淡水贻贝(蚬科)是一类多样(约360种北美物种)且濒危的生物群体。贻贝表现出巨大的种间形态变异,可能具有广泛的生态意义。我们旨在通过使用一个强大的数据集(代表64个物种的1362个个体,涵盖北美淡水贻贝动物群广泛横截面),结合大小、形状和雕刻数据,对现有的贝壳形态分类系统进行定量修改。使用多变量技术,我们根据假设能解释物种分布和栖息地关联的性状相似性,将物种分类为形态类别。然后,我们使用定量贻贝调查数据以及在三个空间尺度[河流(千米)、河段(40 - 150米)、斑块(0.25米)]收集的配对环境数据,测试该分类系统对性状 - 环境关系的预测效果。基于雕刻、形状和体型性状,贻贝物种聚为六个不同的形态类别。我们在每个空间尺度上都发现了形态类别与环境参数之间的关联。与先前的框架相比,修改后的分类解释了更多由非生物变量预测的群落分布变异。我们的研究强调了形态性状在预测物种分布和理解群落组装机制方面的价值,并且为同行研究人员扩展我们的形态分类提供了基础。这些知识对贻贝保护和管理具有重要意义,因为它有助于识别合适的栖息地,通过纳入多个空间尺度、广泛的物种代表性和地理分布以及一系列丰富的形态性状来指导重新引入策略。