Abstract

Abstract. The Balkan Lake Ohrid is the oldest and most diverse freshwater lacustrine system in Europe. However, it remains unclear whether species community composition, as well as the diversification of its endemic taxa, is mainly driven by dispersal limitation, environmental filtering, or species interaction. This calls for a holistic perspective involving both evolutionary processes and ecological dynamics, as provided by the unifying framework of the “metacommunity speciation model”.The current study used the species-rich model taxon Gastropoda to assess how extant communities in Lake Ohrid are structured by performing process-based metacommunity analyses. Specifically, the study aimed (1) to identifying the relative importance of the three community assembly processes and (2) to test whether the importance of these individual processes changes gradually with lake depth or discontinuously with eco-zone shifts.Based on automated eco-zone detection and process-specific simulation steps, we demonstrated that dispersal limitation had the strongest influence on gastropod community composition. However, it was not the exclusive assembly process, but acted together with the other two processes – environmental filtering and species interaction. The relative importance of the community assembly processes varied both with lake depth and eco-zones, though the processes were better predicted by the latter.This suggests that environmental characteristics have a pronounced effect on shaping gastropod communities via assembly processes. Moreover, the study corroborated the high importance of dispersal limitation for both maintaining species richness in Lake Ohrid (through its impact on community composition) and generating endemic biodiversity (via its influence on diversification processes). However, according to the metacommunity speciation model, the inferred importance of environmental filtering and biotic interaction also suggests a small but significant influence of ecological speciation. These findings contribute to the main goal of the Scientific Collaboration on Past Speciation Conditions in Lake Ohrid (SCOPSCO) deep drilling initiative – inferring the drivers of biotic evolution – and might provide an integrative perspective on biological and limnological dynamics in ancient Lake Ohrid.

Highlights

  • Ancient Lake Ohrid on the Balkan Peninsula (Fig. 1) is the oldest and most speciose freshwater lacustrine system in Europe (Albrecht and Wilke, 2008; Neubauer et al, 2015)

  • Using our ABC-SMC-based stepwise community assembly (STEPCAM) approach, we obtained a posterior distribution for the relative contribution of the three community assembly processes in shaping the lakes’ gastropod communities

  • We used two Bayesian generalized linear model (BGLM) to test whether the relative importance of the three community assembly processes was better predicted by either lake depth or delineated eco-zones

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Summary

Introduction

Ancient Lake Ohrid on the Balkan Peninsula (Fig. 1) is the oldest and most speciose freshwater lacustrine system in Europe (Albrecht and Wilke, 2008; Neubauer et al, 2015). An International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP; Wagner et al, 2014) has been conducted in the lake within the research initiative Scientific Collaboration on Past Speciation Conditions in Lake Ohrid (SCOPSCO). One of the major goals of this collaborative project is to infer the drivers of speciation by linking the geological and biotic evolution of the lake over space and time. Geological, limnological, and paleontological data from sediment cores are being complemented with phylogenetic and molecular clock data derived from DNA information of extant endemic species. Though the sediment and molecular data are still being analyzed, first results indicate that climatic, geological, and/or environmental changes over time may have had little direct effect on speciation and extinction processes in selected endemic biota of Lake Ohrid (Föller et al, 2015).

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