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- Title
Species sorting and patch dynamics in harlequin metacommunities affect the relative importance of environment and space.
- Authors
Leibold, Mathew A.; Loeuille, Nicolas
- Abstract
Metacommunity theory indicates that variation in local community structure can be partitioned into components including those related to local environmental conditions vs. spatial effects and that these can be quantified using statistical methods based on variation partitioning. It has been hypothesized that joint associations of community composition with environment and space could be due to patch dynamics involving colonization-extinction processes in environmentally heterogeneous landscapes but this has yet to be theoretically shown. We develop a two-patch, type-two, species competition model in such a "harlequin" landscape (where different patches have different environments) to evaluate how composition is related to environmental and spatial effects as a function of background extinction rate. Using spatially implicit analytical models, we find that the environmental association of community composition declines with extinction rate as expected. Using spatially explicit simulation models, we further find that there is an increase in the spatial structure with extinction due to spatial patterning into clusters that are not related to environmental conditions but that this increase is limited. Natural metacommunities often show both environment and spatial determination even under conditions of relatively high isolation and these could be more easily explained by our model than alternative metacommunity models.
- Subjects
SPECIES; BIOLOGICAL classification; HARLEQUIN cabbage bug; ORGANISMS; GENETICS
- Publication
Ecology, 2015, Vol 96, Issue 12, p3227
- ISSN
0012-9658
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1890/14-2354.1