| Literature DB >> 25384802 |
Gabriel Zorello Laporta, Maria Anice Mureb Sallum.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Species coexistence in mosquito assemblages may depend on mechanisms related to interspecific resource partitioning occurring at multiple scales. In the present work we investigated co-occurrence or spatial segregation in mosquito assemblages sharing resources at micro-habitat, habitat and landscape scales. Environmental characteristics, mosquito fauna as adults and larvae were assessed along vegetation gradient in a natural landscape of tropical rainforest. Huisman-Olff-Fresco (HOF) and Generalized Additive (GAM) models were employed to explore relationships between abundances of potential competitors in mosquito assemblages and vegetation gradient (e.g., scrublands, mixed arboreal vegetation and dense ombrophilous forest). We tested hypotheses concerning mosquito species co-occurrence or spatial segregation employing binomial logistic regression models.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25384802 PMCID: PMC4247778 DOI: 10.1186/s12898-014-0030-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ecol ISSN: 1472-6785 Impact factor: 2.964
Figure 1Coexistence mechanisms. A) Larva of the species 1 (sp1) and larva of the species 2 (sp2) can co-occur at the micro-habitat (e.g., bromeliad central tank or leaf axils) if they can vertically partition food and space (i.e., one feeds at the surface and the other at the bottom). B) The coexistence among larvae of competitor species is mediated by vegetation heterogeneity that allows occurrence of the sp1 in the ground (e.g., terrestrial bromeliads) and the sp2 in the canopy (epiphyte). C) Along a physiognomic gradient of vegetation, interactions among potential competitors (sp1 and sp2) are determined by the landscape context, causing one species to be superior competitor in a physiological stressful scenario (scrub) and the other as being an efficient competitor in the forest.
Figure 2Study area. A) The Atlantic Forest domain and its forest remnants. B) Atlantic Forest remnants in São Paulo and Paraná States. C) Location of the Parque Estadual da Ilha do Cardoso (Bernardi et al. [22]). D) Collection sites for measurements of vegetation complexity, the number of ground and phytotelmata oviposition sites and the number and identification of immature and adult mosquitoes. Source: Conservation International (CI), Critical Ecosystem Partnership Funding (CEPF), Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE).
Figure 3Mosquito larvae collections across the gradient of forest physiognomies. This drawing represents the vegetation complexity and mosquito larvae natural containers and ground waters which varied accordingly as follows: a) ephemeral ground pool; b) terrestrial bromeliad plant (Quesnelia sp.); c) terrestrial bromeliad plant (Nidularium sp.); d) ephemeral ground pool; e) epiphytic bromeliad plant (Vriesea sp.); f) ephemeral ground pool; g) epiphytic bromeliad plant (Vriesea sp.); h) leaf axils in palm tree (Euterpe sp.); i) leaf axils in phytotelmata (Calathea sp.); j) hollow internode of bamboo plant (Merostachys sp.); k) tree hole in long-lived tree; l) ephemeral ground pool; m) flower bracts in phytotelmata (Heliconia sp.) and n) margins of permanent lotic waters.
Figure 4Observed pattern of co-occurrences or spatial segregation among potential competitors. A) An. bellator and Cx. imitator co-occurred on scrublands at habitat scale. B) Wy. muehlensi and Wy. quasilongirostris co-occurred in the transition zone at habitat scale. C) An. bellator and An. cruzii and D) Ae. scapularis and Ae. serratus co-occurred at landscape scale and spatially segregated at habitat scale. GAM for non-monotonic HOF models and 95%CI are in Additional file 7: Figure S5, Additional file 9: Figure S7.
Co-occurrences or spatial segregation of mosquito potential competitor species as larvae, Parque Estadual da Ilha do Cardoso, 2009-2010
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| bromeliad (Figure | 8.75 (3.47, 22.04)a | < 0.001 | Co-occurrence at micro-habitat scale (e.g., bromeliad) | Gilbert et al. [ | Specializing feeding behavior within a given larval container |
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| bromeliad (Figure | 0.15 (0.06, 0.37)b | < 0.001 | Co-occurrence at habitat scale (e.g., ecotone); spatial segregation at micro-habitat | Gilbert et al. [ | Spatial heterogeneity promote coexistence by changing the scale at which competing species can coexist |
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| bromeliad (Figure | 0.14 (0.05, 0.34)b | < 0.001 | Co-occurrence at landscape scale; spatial segregation at micro-habitat (e.g., bromeliads) and habitat scales | Juliano [ | Biotic interactions involving mosquito larvae are modulated by effects of context dependence across habitat gradients |
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| ephemeral ground pools (Figure | 0.1 (0.02, 0.61)b | = 0.013 | Co-occurrence at landscape scale; spatial segregation at micro-habitat (e.g., ephemeral pools) and habitat scales | Juliano [ | Biotic interactions involving mosquito larvae are modulated by effects of context dependence across habitat gradients |
: this is a significant result under the null hypothesis OR =1. Thus there is co-occurrence between the two species.
: this is a significant result under the null hypothesis OR =1. Thus the two species do not co-occur.
Figure 5Relationships between mosquito diversity and the gradient of forest physiognomies. A) Mosquito species richness has a bimodal, skewed response pattern. The strong peak is related to the heterogeneity of vegetation complexity. B) The heterogeneity of vegetation complexity has also a bimodal skewed response pattern, similar to mosquito species richness. C) Mosquito species richness increased linearly with heterogeneity of vegetation complexity until it reached an asymptote where a mix of arboreal and scrub vegetation occurred. D) The mosquito assemblage evenness-dominance profile as a function of heterogeneity of vegetation complexity. High levels of heterogeneity of vegetation complexity resulted in assemblage evenness, whereas medium to low levels of heterogeneity of vegetation complexity resulted in the presence of dominant assemblages. GAM for non-monotonic HOF models and 95%CI are in Additional file 8: Figure S6.