Trait convergence and trait divergence in lake phytoplankton reflect community assembly rules

被引:16
|
作者
Borics, Gabor [1 ]
B-Beres, Viktoria [1 ]
Bacsi, Istvan [3 ]
Lukacs, Balazs A. [2 ]
T-Krasznai, E. [1 ]
Botta-Dukat, Zoltan [4 ]
Varbiro, Gabor [1 ]
机构
[1] Ctr Ecol Res, Danube Res Inst, Dept Tisza Res, 18-C Bern Sq, H-4026 Debrecen, Hungary
[2] Ctr Ecol Res, Danube Res Inst, Wetland Ecol Res Grp, 18-C Bern Sq, H-4026 Debrecen, Hungary
[3] Univ Debrecen, Dept Hydrobiol, POB 57, H-4010 Debrecen, Hungary
[4] Ctr Ecol Res, Inst Ecol & Bot, 2-4 Alkotmany Str, H-2163 Vacratot, Hungary
关键词
FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY; CARPATHIAN BASIN; BOTTOM-UP; ECOSYSTEM; COMPETITION; GRADIENT; REVEALS;
D O I
10.1038/s41598-020-76645-7
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Environmental filtering and limiting similarity are those locally acting processes that influence community structure. These mechanisms acting on the traits of species result in trait convergence or divergence within the communities. The role of these processes might change along environmental gradients, and it has been conceptualised in the stress-dominance hypothesis, which predicts that the relative importance of environmental filtering increases and competition decreases with increasing environmental stress. Analysing trait convergence and divergence in lake phytoplankton assemblages, we studied how the concepts of 'limiting similarity' versus 'environmental filtering' can be applied to these microscopic aquatic communities, and how they support or contradict the stress-dominance hypothesis. Using a null model approach, we investigated the divergence and convergence of phytoplankton traits along environmental gradients represented by canonical axes of an RDA. We used Rao's quadratic entropy as a measure of functional diversity and calculated effect size (ES) values for each sample. Negative ES values refer to trait convergence, i.e., to the higher probability of the environmental filtering in community assembly, while positive values indicate trait divergence, stressing the importance of limiting similarity (niche partitioning), that is, the competition between the phytoplankters. Our results revealed that limiting similarity and environmental filtering may operate simultaneously in phytoplankton communities, but these assembly mechanisms influenced the distribution of phytoplankton traits differently, and the effects show considerable changes along with the studied scales. Studying the changes of ES values along with the various scales, our results partly supported the stress-dominance hypothesis, which predicts that the relative importance of environmental filtering increases and competition decreases with increasing environmental stress.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The quest for trait convergence and divergence in community assembly: are null-models the magic wand?
    de Bello, Francesco
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2012, 21 (03): : 312 - 317
  • [2] Which randomizations detect convergence and divergence in trait-based community assembly? A test of commonly used null models
    Gotzenberger, Lars
    Botta-Dukat, Zoltan
    Leps, Jan
    Partel, Meelis
    Zobel, Martin
    de Bello, Francesco
    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2016, 27 (06) : 1275 - 1287
  • [3] Community assembly along a soil depth gradient: contrasting patterns of plant trait convergence and divergence in a Mediterranean rangeland
    Bernard-Verdier, Maud
    Navas, Marie-Laure
    Vellend, Mark
    Violle, Cyrille
    Fayolle, Adeline
    Garnier, Eric
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2012, 100 (06) : 1422 - 1433
  • [4] Changes in trait divergence and convergence along a productivity gradient in wet meadows
    Carboni, Marta
    de Bello, Francesco
    Janecek, Stepan
    Dolezal, Jiri
    Hornik, Jan
    Leps, Jan
    Reitalu, Triin
    Klimesova, Jitka
    AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2014, 182 : 96 - 105
  • [5] Constraints on trait combinations explain climatic drivers of biodiversity: the importance of trait covariance in community assembly
    Dwyer, John M.
    Laughlin, Daniel C.
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2017, 20 (07) : 872 - 882
  • [6] Importance and benefit of incorporating the responses of species mean trait values in trait-based community assembly
    Yang, Jing
    Lu, Jiahui
    Wang, RenRen
    Wang, Xihua
    Li, Shaopeng
    Shen, Guochun
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2021, 130
  • [7] Spatial scale and intraspecific trait variability mediate assembly rules in alpine grasslands
    Chalmandrier, Loic
    Munkemuller, Tamara
    Colace, Marie-Pascale
    Renaud, Julien
    Aubert, Serge
    Carlson, Bradley Z.
    Clement, Jean-Christophe
    Legay, Nicolas
    Pellet, Gilles
    Saillard, Amelie
    Lavergne, Sebastien
    Thuiller, Wilfried
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2017, 105 (01) : 277 - 287
  • [8] Unveiling ecological assembly rules from commonalities in trait distributions
    Gross, Nicolas
    Le Bagousse-Pinguet, Yoann
    Liancourt, Pierre
    Saiz, Hugo
    Violle, Cyrille
    Munoz, Francois
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2021, 24 (08) : 1668 - 1680
  • [9] Using functional trait diversity to infer community assembly mechanisms: an exclosure experiment as an example
    Liu, Xiaoqin
    Zhang, Xiang
    Zhang, Lifeng
    Li, Yingnian
    Zhao, Liang
    Xu, Shixiao
    Gao, Yubao
    Gu, Song
    JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY, 2019, 12 (03) : 448 - 459
  • [10] Robustness of trait distribution metrics for community assembly studies under the uncertainties of assembly processes
    Aiba, Masahiro
    Katabuchi, Masatoshi
    Takafumi, Hino
    Matsuzaki, Shin-ichiro S.
    Sasaki, Takehiro
    Hiura, Tsutom
    ECOLOGY, 2013, 94 (12) : 2873 - 2885