元群落理论作为研究河网结构对河流群落和生态系统影响的多物种、多尺度框架

B. Brown, C. Swan, D. Auerbach, E. C. Campbell Grant, N. Hitt, K. Maloney, C. Patrick
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引用次数: 208

摘要

解释河流网络中物种多样性和组成模式的机制具有挑战性。从历史上看,群落生态学家认为群落在很大程度上是孤立的实体,并把重点放在当地环境因素和种间相互作用上,认为它们是决定物种组成的主要力量。然而,河流生态学家长期以来一直采用多尺度方法来研究河流生态系统,既研究了局部因素,也研究了更大尺度的区域因素,如扩散和干扰。河网呈现出树突状的空间结构,当水生生物的扩散受到河网的影响或局限于河网时,这种结构会限制水生生物的扩散。我们认为,元群落理论的原理将有助于河流生态学家理解复杂的河网空间结构如何调节局部和区域控制对物种组成的相对影响。从基本生态学的角度来看,这一概念是有吸引力的,因为新的证据表明,区域过程(扩散)的重要性取决于栖息地的空间结构和与区域物种库的联系。局地因子相对于区域因子的作用随河网空间位置的不同而不同。从应用的角度来看,生态学长期以来认为当地群落组成是生境质量的一个指标,这一观点可能并不适用于整个河网,但这种生物评估方法的强度可能取决于河网中的空间位置。元群落理论的原理广泛适用于各种分类群和系统,但鉴于河流系统独特的空间结构,似乎对河流生态学具有特殊的影响。元群落理论明确地包含了多个空间尺度的过程,为建立对河流群落更丰富的理解提供了基础。
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Metacommunity theory as a multispecies, multiscale framework for studying the influence of river network structure on riverine communities and ecosystems
Abstract Explaining the mechanisms underlying patterns of species diversity and composition in riverine networks is challenging. Historically, community ecologists have conceived of communities as largely isolated entities and have focused on local environmental factors and interspecific interactions as the major forces determining species composition. However, stream ecologists have long embraced a multiscale approach to studying riverine ecosystems and have studied both local factors and larger-scale regional factors, such as dispersal and disturbance. River networks exhibit a dendritic spatial structure that can constrain aquatic organisms when their dispersal is influenced by or confined to the river network. We contend that the principles of metacommunity theory would help stream ecologists to understand how the complex spatial structure of river networks mediates the relative influences of local and regional control on species composition. From a basic ecological perspective, the concept is attractive because new evidence suggests that the importance of regional processes (dispersal) depends on spatial structure of habitat and on connection to the regional species pool. The role of local factors relative to regional factors will vary with spatial position in a river network. From an applied perspective, the long-standing view in ecology that local community composition is an indicator of habitat quality may not be uniformly applicable across a river network, but the strength of such bioassessment approaches probably will depend on spatial position in the network. The principles of metacommunity theory are broadly applicable across taxa and systems but seem of particular consequence to stream ecology given the unique spatial structure of riverine systems. By explicitly embracing processes at multiple spatial scales, metacommunity theory provides a foundation on which to build a richer understanding of stream communities.
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来源期刊
Journal of the North American Benthological Society
Journal of the North American Benthological Society 生物-海洋与淡水生物学
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