Abstract

Community structure of many systems changes across space in many different ways (e.g., gradual, random or clumpiness). Accessing patterns of species spatial variation in ecosystems characterized by strong environmental gradients, such as estuaries, is essential to provide information on how species respond to them and for identification of potential underlying mechanisms. We investigated how environmental filters (i.e., strong environmental gradients that can include or exclude species in local communities), spatial predictors (i.e., geographical distance between communities) and temporal variations (e.g., different sampling periods) influence benthic macroinfaunal metacommunity structure along salinity gradients in tropical estuaries. We expected environmental filters to explain the highest proportion of total variation due to strong salinity and sediment gradients, and the main structure indicating species displaying individualistic response that yield a continuum of gradually changing composition (i.e., Gleasonian structure). First we identified benthic community structures in three estuaries at Todos os Santos Bay in Bahia, Brazil. Then we used variation partitioning to quantify the influences of environmental, spatial and temporal predictors on the structures identified. More frequently, the benthic metacommunity fitted a quasi-nested pattern with total variation explained by the shared influence of environmental and spatial predictors, probably because of ecological gradients (i.e., salinity decreases from sea to river). Estuarine benthic assemblages were quasi-nested likely for two reasons: first, nested subsets are common in communities subjected to disturbances such as one of our estuarine systems; second, because most of the estuarine species were of marine origin, and consequently sites closer to the sea would be richer while those more distant from the sea would be poorer subsets.

Highlights

  • Community structure of many systems changes across space in many different ways

  • Even though spatial turnover among sites was more often linked to environmental gradients[49], these results indicated that benthic macroinfaunal metacommunities did not always follow a species replacement structure

  • We used Elements of Metacommunity Structure (EMS) combined with a variation partitioning techniques to identify the relationships between environmental, spatial and temporal predictors structuring benthic metacommunities in estuarine systems

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Summary

Introduction

Community structure of many systems changes across space in many different ways (e.g., gradual, random or clumpiness). We investigated how environmental filters (i.e., strong environmental gradients that can include or exclude species in local communities), spatial predictors (i.e., geographical distance between communities) and temporal variations (e.g., different sampling periods) influence benthic macroinfaunal metacommunity structure along salinity gradients in tropical estuaries. Understanding how community structure of many systems changes across space and how mechanisms, driven mostly by dispersal and environmental filters, determine species distribution patterns in local communities is a central question in community ecology[1,2,3]. The mechanistic approach considers the roles of niche (i.e., environmental filters and biotic interactions) and dispersal-related processes in determining such metacommunity structures Both approaches have provided insights into the different processes that structure communities across different ecosystems[10,11,12,13], but have not been applied along well-defined ecological gradients. Groups of species show similar responses to environmental Biotic process may prevent gradients, which replace each other as a group, and can be coexistence of particular sets of classified into distinctive community types

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