Abstract

The majority of studies in metacommunity ecology have focused on systems other than marine benthic ecosystems, thereby providing an impetus to broaden the focus of metacommunity research to comprise marine systems. These systems are more open than many other systems and may thus exhibit relatively less discrete patterns in community structure across space. Metacommunity structure of soft‐sediment benthic invertebrates was examined using a fine‐grained (285 sites) data set collected during one summer across a large spatial extent (1700 km2). We applied the elements of metacommunity structure (EMS) approach, allowing multiple hypothesis of variation in community structure to be tested. We demonstrated several patterns associated with environmental variation and associated processes that could simultaneously assemble species to occur at the sites. A quasi‐Clementsian pattern was observed frequently, suggesting interdependent ecological relationships among species or similar response to an underlying environmental gradient across sites. A quasi‐nested clumped species loss pattern was also observed, which suggests nested habitat specialization. Species richness declined with depth (from 0.5 to 44.8 m). We argue that sensitive species may survive in shallower water, which are more stable with regard to oxygen conditions and present greater habitat complexity, in contrast to deeper waters, which may experience periodic disturbance due to hypoxia. Future studies should better integrate disturbance in terms of temporal dynamics and dispersal rates in the EMS approach. We highlight that shallow water sites may act as sources of recruitment to deeper water sites that are relatively more prone to periodic disturbances due to hypoxia. However, these shallow sites are not currently monitored and should be better prioritized in future conservation strategies in marine systems.

Highlights

  • The metacommunity concept (Leibold et al 2004) considers both local and regional processes in the context of the spatial organization of biological communities

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • We examined how latent environmental gradients in each of the elements of metacommunity structure” (EMS) analysis are associated with species richness and total abundance, as well as measured environmental variables across sites

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Summary

Introduction

The metacommunity concept (Leibold et al 2004) considers both local and regional processes in the context of the spatial organization of biological communities. A metacommunity can broadly be defined as a set of communities that are potentially interlinked by dispersal, whereas a community comprises the species occurring at an individual site (Holyoak et al 2005). Two complementary approaches have been used to evaluate patterns of spatial variation within the metacommunity framework: a mechanistic model-based approach (Cottenie 2005) and a pattern-based approach (Leibold and Mikkelson 2002). The mechanistic approach focuses on spatially mediated models (i.e., patch dynamics, species sorting, mass effects, and neutral model) and their underlying mechanisms (e.g., dispersal, biotic interactions, or responses to abiotic environmental characteristics). The patternbased approach of “elements of metacommunity structure” (EMS; Leibold and Mikkelson 2002) focuses on the distribution of multiple species along latent environmental gradients to identify best-fit patterns that are related a 2015 The Authors.

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