Rethinking biodiversity patterns and processes in stream ecosystems

被引:15
作者
Green, Matthew D. [1 ]
Anderson, Kurt E. [1 ]
Herbst, David B. [2 ,3 ]
Spasojevic, Marko J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Evolut Ecol & Organismal Biol, Riverside, CA 92521 USA
[2] Univ Calif Mammoth Lakes, Sierra Nevada Aquat Res Lab, Mammoth Lakes, CA USA
[3] Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Inst Marine Sci, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
community assembly; diversity; macroinvertebrate; spatial; stream ecology; theory of ecological communities; SPECIES-DIVERSITY; BETA DIVERSITY; MACROINVERTEBRATE COMMUNITIES; INVERTEBRATE COMMUNITIES; LONGITUDINAL TRENDS; LANDSCAPE POSITION; REGIONAL RICHNESS; LAKE OUTLETS; DISPERSAL; SIMULIIDAE;
D O I
10.1002/ecm.1520
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
A major goal of community ecology is understanding the processes responsible for generating biodiversity patterns along spatial and environmental gradients. In stream ecosystems, system-specific conceptual frameworks have dominated research describing biodiversity change along longitudinal gradients of river networks. However, support for these conceptual frameworks has been mixed, mainly applicable to specific stream ecosystems and biomes, and these frameworks have placed less emphasis on general mechanisms driving biodiversity patterns. Rethinking biodiversity patterns and processes in stream ecosystems with a focus on the overarching mechanisms common across ecosystems will provide a more holistic understanding of why biodiversity patterns vary along river networks. In this study, we apply the theory of ecological communities (TEC) conceptual framework to stream ecosystems to focus explicitly on the core ecological processes structuring communities: dispersal, speciation, niche selection, and ecological drift. Using a unique case study from high-elevation networks of connected lakes and streams, we sampled stream invertebrate communities in the Sierra Nevada, California, USA to test established stream ecology frameworks and compared them with the TEC framework. Local diversity increased and beta-diversity decreased moving downstream from the headwaters, consistent with the river continuum concept and the small but mighty framework of mountain stream biodiversity. Local diversity was also structured by distance below upstream lakes, where diversity increased with distance below upstream lakes, in support of the serial discontinuity concept. Despite some support for the biodiversity patterns predicted from the stream ecology frameworks, no single framework was fully supported, suggesting "context dependence." By framing our results under the TEC, we found that species diversity was structured by niche selection, where local diversity was highest in environmentally favorable sites. Local diversity was also highest in sites with small community sizes, countering the predicted effects of ecological drift. Moreover, higher beta-diversity in the headwaters was influenced by dispersal and niche selection, where environmentally harsh and spatially isolated sites exhibit higher community variation. Taken together our results suggest that combining system-specific ecological frameworks with the TEC provides a powerful approach for inferring the mechanisms driving biodiversity patterns and provides a path toward generalization of biodiversity research across ecosystems.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Effects of two measures of riparian plant biodiversity on litter decomposition and associated processes in stream microcosms
    Lopez-Rojo, Naiara
    Perez, Javier
    Basaguren, Ana
    Pozo, Jesus
    Rubio-Rios, Juan
    Jesus Casas, J.
    Boyero, Luz
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2020, 10 (01)
  • [42] A comprehensive framework for global patterns in biodiversity
    Ricklefs, RE
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2004, 7 (01) : 1 - 15
  • [43] Microevolutionary Processes in a Foundation Tree Inform Macrosystem Patterns of Community Biodiversity and Structure
    Bothwell, Helen M. M.
    Keith, Arthur R. R.
    Cooper, Hillary F. F.
    Hull, Julia B. B.
    Andrews, Lela V. V.
    Wehenkel, Christian
    Hultine, Kevin R. R.
    Gehring, Catherine A. A.
    Cushman, Samuel A. A.
    Whitham, Thomas G. G.
    Allan, Gerard J. J.
    FORESTS, 2023, 14 (05):
  • [44] Accounting for temporal change in multiple biodiversity patterns improves the inference of metacommunity processes
    Guzman, Laura Melissa
    Thompson, Patrick L.
    Viana, Duarte S.
    Vanschoenwinkel, Bram
    Horvath, Zsofia
    Ptacnik, Robert
    Jeliazkov, Alienor
    Gascon, Stephanie
    Lemmens, Pieter
    Anton-Pardo, Maria
    Langenheder, Silke
    De Meester, Luc
    Chase, Jonathan M.
    ECOLOGY, 2022, 103 (06)
  • [45] Southern Ocean deep-sea biodiversity-From patterns to processes
    Brandt, Angelika
    Ebbe, Brigitte
    DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART II-TOPICAL STUDIES IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 2009, 56 (19-20) : 1732 - 1738
  • [46] Evolutionary processes driving spatial patterns of intraspecific genetic diversity in river ecosystems
    Paz-Vinas, I.
    Loot, G.
    Stevens, V. M.
    Blanchet, S.
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2015, 24 (18) : 4586 - 4604
  • [47] Headwater biodiversity among different levels of stream habitat hierarchy
    Gothe, Emma
    Friberg, Nikolai
    Kahlert, Maria
    Temnerud, Johan
    Sandin, Leonard
    BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2014, 23 (01) : 63 - 80
  • [48] Exploring the role of environmental variables in shaping patterns of seabed biodiversity composition in regional-scale ecosystems
    Pitcher, C. Roland
    Lawton, Peter
    Ellis, Nick
    Smith, Stephen J.
    Incze, Lewis S.
    Wei, Chih-Lin
    Greenlaw, Michelle E.
    Wolff, Nicholas H.
    Sameoto, Jessica A.
    Snelgrove, Paul V. R.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2012, 49 (03) : 670 - 679
  • [49] Exploring stream communities in a tropical biodiversity hotspot: biodiversity, regional occupancy, niche characteristics and environmental correlates
    Tonkin, Jonathan D.
    Arimoro, Francis O.
    Haase, Peter
    BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2016, 25 (05) : 975 - 993
  • [50] Community assembly and the functioning of ecosystems: how metacommunity processes alter ecosystems attributes
    Leibold, Mathew A.
    Chase, Jonathan M.
    Ernest, S. K. Morgan
    ECOLOGY, 2017, 98 (04) : 909 - 919