| Literature DB >> 27277404 |
Jean-Philippe Lessard, Ben G Weinstein, Michael K Borregaard, Katharine A Marske, Danny R Martin, Jimmy A McGuire, Juan L Parra, Carsten Rahbek, Catherine H Graham.
Abstract
A persistent challenge in ecology is to tease apart the influence of multiple processes acting simultaneously and interacting in complex ways to shape the structure of species assemblages. We implement a heuristic approach that relies on explicitly defining species pools and permits assessment of the relative influence of the main processes thought to shape assemblage structure: environmental filtering, dispersal limitations, and biotic interactions. We illustrate our approach using data on the assemblage composition and geographic distribution of hummingbirds, a comprehensive phylogeny and morphological traits. The implementation of several process-based species pool definitions in null models suggests that temperature-but not precipitation or dispersal limitation-acts as the main regional filter of assemblage structure. Incorporating this environmental filter directly into the definition of assemblage-specific species pools revealed an otherwise hidden pattern of phylogenetic evenness, indicating that biotic interactions might further influence hummingbird assemblage structure. Such hidden patterns of assemblage structure call for a reexamination of a multitude of phylogenetic- and trait-based studies that did not explicitly consider potentially important processes in their definition of the species pool. Our heuristic approach provides a transparent way to explore patterns and refine interpretations of the underlying causes of assemblage structure.Keywords: community assembly; dispersal limitation; niche differentiation; regional species pool; scale
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27277404 DOI: 10.1086/684128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am Nat ISSN: 0003-0147 Impact factor: 3.926