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Environmental filtering predicts plant‐community trait distribution and diversity: Kettle holes as models of meta‐community systems.

Authors :
Lozada‐Gobilard, Sissi
Stang, Susanne
Pirhofer‐Walzl, Karin
Kalettka, Thomas
Heinken, Thilo
Schröder, Boris
Eccard, Jana
Joshi, Jasmin
Source :
Ecology & Evolution (20457758). Feb2019, Vol. 9 Issue 4, p1898-1910. 13p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Meta‐communities of habitat islands may be essential to maintain biodiversity in anthropogenic landscapes allowing rescue effects in local habitat patches. To understand the species‐assembly mechanisms and dynamics of such ecosystems, it is important to test how local plant‐community diversity and composition is affected by spatial isolation and hence by dispersal limitation and local environmental conditions acting as filters for local species sorting.We used a system of 46 small wetlands (kettle holes)—natural small‐scale freshwater habitats rarely considered in nature conservation policies—embedded in an intensively managed agricultural matrix in northern Germany. We compared two types of kettle holes with distinct topographies (flat‐sloped, ephemeral, frequently plowed kettle holes vs. steep‐sloped, more permanent ones) and determined 254 vascular plant species within these ecosystems, as well as plant functional traits and nearest neighbor distances to other kettle holes.Differences in alpha and beta diversity between steep permanent compared with ephemeral flat kettle holes were mainly explained by species sorting and niche processes and mass effect processes in ephemeral flat kettle holes. The plant‐community composition as well as the community trait distribution in terms of life span, breeding system, dispersal ability, and longevity of seed banks significantly differed between the two habitat types. Flat ephemeral kettle holes held a higher percentage of non‐perennial plants with a more persistent seed bank, less obligate outbreeders and more species with seed dispersal abilities via animal vectors compared with steep‐sloped, more permanent kettle holes that had a higher percentage of wind‐dispersed species. In the flat kettle holes, plant‐species richness was negatively correlated with the degree of isolation, whereas no such pattern was found for the permanent kettle holes.Synthesis: Environment acts as filter shaping plant diversity (alpha and beta) and plant‐community trait distribution between steep permanent compared with ephemeral flat kettle holes supporting species sorting and niche mechanisms as expected, but we identified a mass effect in ephemeral kettle holes only. Flat ephemeral kettle holes can be regarded as meta‐ecosystems that strongly depend on seed dispersal and recruitment from a seed bank, whereas neighboring permanent kettle holes have a more stable local species diversity. In our study, we compare plant communities in two different types of kettle holes (island habitats scattered in an intensive agricultural landscapes), and we found differences in plant compositions and functional plant traits. Flat ephemeral plowed kettle holes depend on seed dispersal and recruitment from a seed bank and are affected by isolation and agricultural practices, while deep permanent non‐plowed kettle holes had more stable plant communities. We discuss the importance to conserve these meta‐ecosystems and highlight for the first time the vulnerability of ephemeral kettle holes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20457758
Volume :
9
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Ecology & Evolution (20457758)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134966023
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4883