Literature DB >> 34085106

Modelling selection, drift, dispersal and their interactions in the community assembly of Amazonian soil mites.

Pedro A C L Pequeno1, Elizabeth Franklin2, Roy A Norton3.   

Abstract

Three processes can explain contemporary community assembly: natural selection, ecological drift and dispersal. However, quantifying their effects has been complicated by confusion between different processes and neglect of expected interactions among them. One possible solution is to simultaneously model the expected effects of each process within species, across communities and across species, thus providing more integrative tests of ecological theory. Here, we used generalized linear mixed models to assess the effects of selection, drift and dispersal on the occurrence probability of 135 soil oribatid mite species across 55 sites over an Amazonian rainforest landscape (64 km2). We tested for interactions between process-related factors and partitioned the explained variation among them. We found that occurrence probability (1) responded to soil P content and litter mass depending on body size and reproductive mode (sexual or parthenogenetic), respectively (selection); (2) increased with community size (drift); and (3) decreased with distance to the nearest source population, and more so in rare species (dispersal limitation). Processes did not interact significantly, and our best model explained 67% of the overall variation in species occurrence probability. However, most of the variation was attributable to dispersal limitation (55%). Our results challenge the seldom-tested theoretical prediction that ecological processes should interact. Rather, they suggest that dispersal limitation overrides the signatures of drift and selection at the landscape level, thus rendering soil microarthropod species ecologically equivalent and possibly contributing to the maintenance of metacommunity diversity.
© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

Keywords:  Community structure; Dispersal limitation; Ecological niche; Environmental filtering; Functional traits

Year:  2021        PMID: 34085106     DOI: 10.1007/s00442-021-04954-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oecologia        ISSN: 0029-8549            Impact factor:   3.225


  15 in total

1.  Primary assembly of soil communities: disentangling the effect of dispersal and local environment.

Authors:  María Ingimarsdóttir; Tancredi Caruso; Jörgen Ripa; Olöf Birna Magnúsdóttir; Massimo Migliorini; Katarina Hedlund
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2012-04-26       Impact factor: 3.225

2.  Euclidean geometry explains why lengths allow precise body mass estimates in terrestrial invertebrates: the case of oribatid mites.

Authors:  T Caruso; M Migliorini
Journal:  J Theor Biol       Date:  2008-10-15       Impact factor: 2.691

Review 3.  Beyond biogeographic patterns: processes shaping the microbial landscape.

Authors:  China A Hanson; Jed A Fuhrman; M Claire Horner-Devine; Jennifer B H Martiny
Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol       Date:  2012-05-14       Impact factor: 60.633

4.  Patch size matters more than dispersal distance in a mainland-island metacommunity.

Authors:  Jens Aström; Jan Bengtsson
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2011-05-29       Impact factor: 3.225

5.  Integrating environmental and spatial processes in ecological community dynamics.

Authors:  Karl Cottenie
Journal:  Ecol Lett       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 9.492

6.  Relative role of deterministic and stochastic determinants of soil animal community: a spatially explicit analysis of oribatid mites.

Authors:  Tancredi Caruso; Mauro Taormina; Massimo Migliorini
Journal:  J Anim Ecol       Date:  2011-07-01       Impact factor: 5.091

Review 7.  From the Neutral Theory to a Comprehensive and Multiscale Theory of Ecological Equivalence.

Authors:  François Munoz; Philippe Huneman
Journal:  Q Rev Biol       Date:  2016-09       Impact factor: 4.875

8.  On the reliability of N-mixture models for count data.

Authors:  Richard J Barker; Matthew R Schofield; William A Link; John R Sauer
Journal:  Biometrics       Date:  2017-07-03       Impact factor: 2.571

9.  Direct quantification of ecological drift at the population level in synthetic bacterial communities.

Authors:  Stilianos Fodelianakis; Adriana Valenzuela-Cuevas; Alan Barozzi; Daniele Daffonchio
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2020-08-27       Impact factor: 10.302

10.  Oribatid mites reveal that competition for resources and trophic structure combine to regulate the assembly of diverse soil animal communities.

Authors:  Matthew Magilton; Mark Maraun; Mark Emmerson; Tancredi Caruso
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-07-04       Impact factor: 2.912

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  1 in total

1.  Dispersal patterns of oribatid mites across habitats and seasons.

Authors:  Peter Hans Cordes; Mark Maraun; Ina Schaefer
Journal:  Exp Appl Acarol       Date:  2022-01-17       Impact factor: 2.132

  1 in total

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