Abstract

Community structure is driven by mechanisms linked to environmental, spatial and temporal processes, which have been successfully addressed using metacommunity framework. The relative importance of processes shaping community structure can be identified using several different approaches. Two approaches that are increasingly being used are functional diversity and community deconstruction. Functional diversity is measured using various indices that incorporate distinct community attributes. Community deconstruction is a way to disentangle species responses to ecological processes by grouping species with similar traits. We used these two approaches to determine whether they are improvements over traditional measures (e.g., species composition, abundance, biomass) for identification of the main processes driving dung beetle (Scarabaeinae) community structure in a fragmented mainland-island landscape in southern Brazilian Atlantic Forest. We sampled five sites in each of four large forest areas, two on the mainland and two on the island. Sampling was performed in 2012 and 2013. We collected abundance and biomass data from 100 sampling points distributed over 20 sampling sites. We studied environmental, spatial and temporal effects on dung beetle community across three spatial scales, i.e., between sites, between areas and mainland-island. The γ-diversity based on species abundance was mainly attributed to β-diversity as a consequence of the increase in mean α- and β-diversity between areas. Variation partitioning on abundance, biomass and functional diversity showed scale-dependence of processes structuring dung beetle metacommunities. We identified two major groups of responses among 17 functional groups. In general, environmental filters were important at both local and regional scales. Spatial factors were important at the intermediate scale. Our study supports the notion of scale-dependence of environmental, spatial and temporal processes in the distribution and functional organization of Scarabaeinae beetles. We conclude that functional diversity may be used as a complementary approach to traditional measures, and that community deconstruction allows sufficient disentangling of responses of different trait-based groups.

Highlights

  • Community ecology has advanced greatly in recent decades with the understanding that local species diversity is jointly affected by ecological processes operating at different spatial scales [1,2,3]

  • Our results show that environmental, spatial and temporal processes play different roles in structuring species composition in Scarabaeinae metacommunities

  • The relative importance of these processes depends on spatial scale and the community dataset analyzed

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Summary

Introduction

Community ecology has advanced greatly in recent decades with the understanding that local species diversity is jointly affected by ecological processes operating at different spatial scales [1,2,3]. Four theoretical models have been proposed to characterize mechanistic processes operating in metacommunities: species sorting, patch dynamics, mass effects and neutral model [2, 6, 7] These models consider two main issues: whether and how species respond to changes in environmental conditions, and whether species dispersal ability is limited, efficient or high [7, 8]. In an environment with similar environmental conditions, a neutral metacommunity would be composed of individuals of different species that are similar in their competitive ability, dispersal and fitness; in this case speciation, extinction and dispersal limitation drives variation in local community composition [10]. A key issue is to understand the relative roles of environmental and spatial processes [8]

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