Literature DB >> 20735465

Metacommunity phylogenetics: separating the roles of environmental filters and historical biogeography.

Mathew A Leibold1, Evan P Economo, Pedro Peres-Neto.   

Abstract

Biogeographical, evolutionary and ecological processes interact to regulate patterns in metacommunities. However, as there are few quantitative methods for evaluating their joint effects, resolving this interaction is difficult. We develop a method that aims to evaluate the interaction between phylogenetic structure, historical biogeographic events and environmental filtering in driving species distributions in a large-scale metacommunity. Using freshwater zooplankton as a case study, we contrast the phylogenetic metacommunity structure of calanoid copepods and an ecologically similar but more vagile group, daphniids, in the northeastern US. We find that legacies of historical biogeographical events have strongly constrained calanoid distributions within this area, but that adaptation to different water chemistry and lake morphology drives the metacommunity structure of daphniids. Our findings show that biogeographic history and metacommunity processes jointly regulate community structure in these lakes and suggest that this also depends on factors that affect the colonization rate of different types of organisms. 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/CNRS.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20735465     DOI: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2010.01523.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecol Lett        ISSN: 1461-023X            Impact factor:   9.492


  20 in total

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5.  Scale decisions can reverse conclusions on community assembly processes.

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Journal:  Glob Ecol Biogeogr       Date:  2014-06-01       Impact factor: 7.144

6.  Variation in Body Shape across Species and Populations in a Radiation of Diaptomid Copepods.

Authors:  Stephen Hausch; Jonathan B Shurin; Blake Matthews
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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-11-29       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  The Interplay between Environmental Filtering and Spatial Processes in Structuring Communities: The Case of Neotropical Snake Communities.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-06-10       Impact factor: 3.240

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