Pattern of species occurrence in detritus-based communities with variable connectivity

Patterns and mechanisms of species occurrence in space and time are outstanding questions in community and conservation ecology. Much of the current debate focuses on randomness or non-randomness in the structuring process of ecological communities, and the extent to which local/deterministic or reg...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: B. Bellisario, F. Cerfolli, G. Nascetti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2011-05-01
Series:Web Ecology
Online Access:http://www.web-ecol.net/11/1/2011/we-11-1-2011.pdf
id doaj-afdf0d4630b54f8ba95cfbe9d43b3bae
record_format Article
spelling doaj-afdf0d4630b54f8ba95cfbe9d43b3bae2020-11-25T02:02:58ZengCopernicus PublicationsWeb Ecology2193-30811399-11832011-05-011111910.5194/we-11-1-2011Pattern of species occurrence in detritus-based communities with variable connectivityB. BellisarioF. CerfolliG. NascettiPatterns and mechanisms of species occurrence in space and time are outstanding questions in community and conservation ecology. Much of the current debate focuses on randomness or non-randomness in the structuring process of ecological communities, and the extent to which local/deterministic or regional/stochastic processes may drive their composition. However, a categorical subdivision could be misleading, as community composition may be driven by a continuum between neutral- and niche-based processes. For instance, in spatially structured systems local processes may surpass regional processes over time or across space to derive non-random metacommunity structure, suggesting the filtering role of the environment in mediating the pattern of species occurrence. In this work we study the temporal composition of detritus-based communities, which are an essential component in many aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. We used data about macroinvertebrate colonization of leaf detritus in different sites of a patchy-connected system, to measure the co-occurrence of species on the detrital resource and evaluate the role of the spatial configuration and the environmental variability in determining the community’s composition. Our results show the importance of considering the joint role of regional and local processes in mediating stochastic and deterministic mechanisms in species assemblage, with important outcomes from a conservation point of view.http://www.web-ecol.net/11/1/2011/we-11-1-2011.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author B. Bellisario
F. Cerfolli
G. Nascetti
spellingShingle B. Bellisario
F. Cerfolli
G. Nascetti
Pattern of species occurrence in detritus-based communities with variable connectivity
Web Ecology
author_facet B. Bellisario
F. Cerfolli
G. Nascetti
author_sort B. Bellisario
title Pattern of species occurrence in detritus-based communities with variable connectivity
title_short Pattern of species occurrence in detritus-based communities with variable connectivity
title_full Pattern of species occurrence in detritus-based communities with variable connectivity
title_fullStr Pattern of species occurrence in detritus-based communities with variable connectivity
title_full_unstemmed Pattern of species occurrence in detritus-based communities with variable connectivity
title_sort pattern of species occurrence in detritus-based communities with variable connectivity
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Web Ecology
issn 2193-3081
1399-1183
publishDate 2011-05-01
description Patterns and mechanisms of species occurrence in space and time are outstanding questions in community and conservation ecology. Much of the current debate focuses on randomness or non-randomness in the structuring process of ecological communities, and the extent to which local/deterministic or regional/stochastic processes may drive their composition. However, a categorical subdivision could be misleading, as community composition may be driven by a continuum between neutral- and niche-based processes. For instance, in spatially structured systems local processes may surpass regional processes over time or across space to derive non-random metacommunity structure, suggesting the filtering role of the environment in mediating the pattern of species occurrence. In this work we study the temporal composition of detritus-based communities, which are an essential component in many aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. We used data about macroinvertebrate colonization of leaf detritus in different sites of a patchy-connected system, to measure the co-occurrence of species on the detrital resource and evaluate the role of the spatial configuration and the environmental variability in determining the community’s composition. Our results show the importance of considering the joint role of regional and local processes in mediating stochastic and deterministic mechanisms in species assemblage, with important outcomes from a conservation point of view.
url http://www.web-ecol.net/11/1/2011/we-11-1-2011.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT bbellisario patternofspeciesoccurrenceindetritusbasedcommunitieswithvariableconnectivity
AT fcerfolli patternofspeciesoccurrenceindetritusbasedcommunitieswithvariableconnectivity
AT gnascetti patternofspeciesoccurrenceindetritusbasedcommunitieswithvariableconnectivity
_version_ 1724950360812945408