Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.71 MB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Aim: Habitat diversity has been linked to the diversity and structure of island communities,
however, little is known about patterns and processes within habitats. Here we
aim to determine the contributions of habitat type and inferred dispersal frequency
to the differences in taxonomic structure between assemblages in the same island
habitat.
Location: The Macaronesian archipelagos (Azores, Madeira, the Canary Islands and
Cabo Verde).
Taxon: Spiders (Araneae) Methods: We established forest and dry habitat sites (each with five plots) on two
islands per archipelago. We collected spiders using standardised sampling protocols.
We tested the differences in beta diversity separately for each habitat and for each
inferred category of ballooning (an aerial dispersal strategy) frequency across geographic
scales through nested non-parametric
permutational multivariate analyses of
variance. We then tested whether ballooning and habitat influenced heterogeneity in
species composition (dispersion in beta diversity) in the two habitat types. We analysed
the effects of habitat and ballooning on species abundance distribution (SAD)
and rarity by fitting Gambin models and evaluating the contribution of ballooning
categories to SAD.
Results: Communities of the same archipelago and habitat were taxonomically more
similar, and beta diversity increased with geographic scale, being greater in dry habitats.
There was greater species replacement among assemblages in dry habitats than
in forests, with greater differences for rare ballooners. There were no differences in
SAD between habitats although dry habitat sites seemed to harbour more species
with low abundances (rare species) than forests.
Main conclusions: Habitat type does not only condition the differences between spider
assemblages of the same habitat but also the scale at which they occur. These
differences may be determined by the heterogeneity in the physical structure of each
habitat as well as how much this structure facilitates aerial dispersal (ballooning), and
should be considered in theories/hypotheses on island community assembly as well
as in conservation strategies
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Araneae beta diversity COBRA sampling protocols neutral processes niche processes rarity
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Journal of Biogeography. 2021;00:1–14
Publisher
Wiley