Abstract

The mechanisms which structure communities have been the focus of a large body of research. Here, we address the question if habitat characteristics describing habitat quality may drive changes in community composition and beta diversity of bromeliad-inhabiting microfauna. In our system, changes in canopy cover along an environmental gradient may affect resource availability, disturbance in form of daily water temperature fluctuations and predation, and thus may lead to changes in community structure of bromeliad microfauna through differences in habitat quality along this gradient. Indeed, we observed distinct changes in microfauna community composition along the environmental gradient explained by changes in the extent of daily water temperature fluctuations. We found beta diversity to be higher under low habitat quality (low canopy cover) than under high habitat quality (high canopy cover), which could potentially be explained by a higher relative importance of stochastic processes under low habitat quality. We also partitioned beta diversity into turnover and nestedness components and we found a nested pattern of beta diversity along the environmental gradient, with communities from the lower-quality habitat being nested subsets of communities from the higher-quality habitat. However, this pattern resulted from an increase in microfauna alpha diversity with an increase in habitat quality. By providing insights into microfauna-environment relationships our results contribute to the mechanistic understanding of community dynamics in small freshwater bodies. Here, we highlight the importance of habitat characteristics representing habitat quality in structuring communities, and suggest that this information may help to improve conservation practices of small freshwater ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Detailed information about an ecosystem and its structuring processes is crucial for development of effective and sustainable conservation strategies for biodiversity maintenance [1]

  • Alpha diversity significantly increased with higher canopy cover (Linear model: F1,76 = 7.8, p = 0.007, Fig 2)

  • With this study we could show that habitat characteristics describing habitat quality play an important role in structuring bromeliad-inhabiting microfauna communities, presumably through changes in the relative importance of stochastic versus deterministic processes

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Summary

Introduction

Detailed information about an ecosystem and its structuring processes is crucial for development of effective and sustainable conservation strategies for biodiversity maintenance [1]. Freshwater ecosystems, which hold a high proportion of species, are experiencing unprecedented declines in biodiversity [2] and are in need of suitable conservation measures [3]. Earlier studies have shown that parameters like disturbances [4], toxic substances [5] and spatial connectivity [6] can potentially affect freshwater community composition. Several likely drivers of species diversity, e.g. elevation [7] and acidity [8], and their abundances, e.g. resource availability [9] and predation [10], have been identified. The drivers of differences in community composition along spatial or environmental gradients have come into the focus of ecological research [12,13,14,15]

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