Functional convergence underground? The scale‐dependency of community assembly processes in European cave spiders

Author:

Mammola Stefano123ORCID,Graco‐Roza Caio45ORCID,Ballarin Francesco6,Hesselberg Thomas78,Isaia Marco9,Lunghi Enrico10ORCID,Mouron Samuel11112,Pavlek Martina1314,Tolve Marco9ORCID,Cardoso Pedro215

Affiliation:

1. MEG – Molecular Ecology Group, Water Research Institute National Research Council of Italy (CNR) Verbania Pallanza Italy

2. Finnish Museum of Natural History University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

3. National Biodiversity Future Center (NBFC) Palermo Italy

4. Lammi Biological Station University of Helsinki Lammi Finland

5. Department of Geosciences and Geography University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

6. Systematic Zoology Laboratory, Department of Biological Sciences Tokyo Metropolitan University Hachioji‐shi Japan

7. Department of Biology University of Oxford Oxford UK

8. Jersey International Centre of Advanced Studies Jersey USA

9. Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology University of Turin Torino Italy

10. Department of Life, Health and Environmental Sciences (MeSVA) University of L'Aquila L'Aquila Italy

11. University of Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, CNRS, ENTPE, UMR 5023 LEHNA Villeurbanne France

12. Bio eKo Consultants Nouméa New Caledonia

13. Division of Molecular Biology Ruđer Bošković Institute Zagreb Croatia

14. Croatian Biospeleological Society Zagreb Croatia

15. CE3C – Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Sciences, CHANGE – Institute for Global Change and Sustainability Faculty of Sciences, University of Lisbon Lisbon Portugal

Abstract

AbstractAimQuantifying the relative contribution of environmental filtering versus limiting similarity in shaping communities is challenging because these processes often act simultaneously and their effect is scale‐dependent. Focusing on caves, island‐like natural laboratories with limited environmental variability and species diversity, we tested: (i) the relative contribution of environmental filtering and limiting similarity in determining community assembly in caves; (ii) how the relative contribution of these driving forces changes along environmental gradients.LocationEurope.Time periodPresent.Major taxa studiedSubterranean spiders.MethodsWe used data on distribution and traits for European cave spiders (n = 475 communities). We estimated the trait space of each community using probabilistic hypervolumes, and obtained estimations of functional richness independent of the species richness of each community via null modelling. We model functional diversity change along environmental gradients using generalized dissimilarity modelling.ResultsSixty‐three percent of subterranean spider communities exhibited a prevalence of trait underdispersion. However, most communities displayed trait dispersion that did not depart significantly from random, suggesting that environmental filtering and limiting similarity were both exerting equally weak or strong, yet opposing influences. Overdispersed communities were primarily concentrated in southern latitudes, particularly in the Dinaric karst, where there is greater subterranean habitat availability. Pairwise comparisons of functional richness across caves revealed these effects to be strongly scale‐dependent, largely varying across gradients of cave development, elevation, precipitation, entrance size and annual temperature range. Conversely, geographical distance weakly affected trait composition, suggesting convergence in traits among communities that are far apart.Main conclusionsEven systems with stringent environmental conditions maintain the potential for trait differentiation, especially in areas of greater habitat availability. Yet, the relative influence of environmental filtering and limiting similarity change with scale, along clear environmental gradients. The interplay of these processes may explain the assembly of species‐poor subterranean communities displaying high functional specialization.

Funder

European Commission

Suomen Kulttuurirahasto

Publisher

Wiley

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