Beyond a single patch: local and regional processes explain diversity patterns in a seagrass epifaunal metacommunity

Author:

Stark KA1,Thompson PL1,Yakimishyn J2,Lee L3,Adamczyk EM1,Hessing-Lewis M4,O’Connor MI1

Affiliation:

1. Biodiversity Research Centre and Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1, Canada

2. Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, PO Box 280, Ucluelet, BC V0R 3A0, Canada

3. Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve, National Marine Conservation Area, and Haida Heritage Site, 60 Second Beach Road, Skidegate, BC V0T 1S1, Canada

4. Hakai Institute, PO Box 309, Heriot Bay, BC V9W 0B7, Canada

Abstract

Ecological communities are jointly structured by dispersal, density-independent responses to environmental conditions, and density-dependent biotic interactions. Metacommunity ecology provides a framework for understanding how these processes combine to determine community seagrass meadows along the British Columbia coast. We tested the hypothesis that eelgrass Zostera marina L. epifaunal invertebrate assemblages are influenced by local environmental conditions but that high dispersal rates at larger spatial scales dampen the effects of environmental differences. We used hierarchical joint species distribution modelling to understand the contribution of environmental conditions, spatial distance between meadows, and species co-occurrences to epifaunal invertebrate abundance and distribution across the region. We found that patterns of taxonomic compositional similarity among meadows were inconsistent with dispersal limitation, and meadows in the same region were often no more similar to each other than meadows over 1000 km away. Abiotic environmental conditions (temperature, dissolved oxygen) explained a small fraction of variation in taxonomic abundance patterns across the region. We found novel co-occurrence patterns among taxa that could not be explained by shared responses to environmental gradients, suggesting the possibility that interspecific interactions influence seagrass invertebrate abundance and distribution. Our results suggest that biodiversity and ecosystem functions provided by seagrass meadows reflect ecological processes occurring both within meadows and across seascapes and that management of eelgrass habitat for biodiversity may be most effective when both local and regional processes are considered.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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