Abstract
Neotropical rainforests sustain some of the most diverse terrestrial communities on Earth. Euglossine (or orchid) bees are a diverse lineage of insect pollinators distributed throughout the American tropics, where they provide pollination services to a staggering diversity of flowering plant taxa. Elucidating the seasonal patterns of phylogenetic assembly and functional trait diversity of bee communities can shed new light into the mechanisms that govern the assembly of bee pollinator communities and the potential effects of declining bee populations. Male euglossine bees collect, store, and accumulate odoriferous compounds (perfumes) to subsequently use during courtship display. Thus, synthetic chemical baits can be used to attract and monitor euglossine bee populations. We conducted monthly censuses of orchid bees in three sites in the Magdalena valley of Colombia – a region where Central and South American biotas converge – to investigate the structure, diversity, and assembly of euglossine bee communities through time in relation to seasonal climatic cycles. In particular, we tested the hypothesis that phylogenetic community structure and functional trait diversity changed in response to seasonal rainfall fluctuations. All communities exhibited strong to moderate phylogenetic clustering throughout the year, with few pronounced bursts of phylogenetic overdispersion that coincided with the transition from wet-to-dry seasons. Despite the heterogeneous distribution of functional traits (e.g., body size, body mass, and proboscis length) and the observed seasonal fluctuations in phylogenetic diversity, we found that functional trait diversity, evenness, and divergence remained constant during all seasons in all communities. However, similar to the pattern observed with phylogenetic diversity, functional trait richness fluctuated markedly with rainfall in all sites. These results emphasize the importance of considering seasonal fluctuations in community assembly and provide a glimpse to the potential effects that climatic alterations may have on both pollinator communities and the ecosystem services they provide.
Highlights
Communities are made of populations of multiple lineages that coexist in time and space, and understanding the mechanisms that control their diversity and structure is a fundamental goal of ecology and evolution
Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
We collected 4784 male euglossine bees of 50 species belonging to five genera in the tribe Euglossini (Table S1, Fig. S1)
Summary
Communities are made of populations of multiple lineages that coexist in time and space, and understanding the mechanisms that control their diversity and structure is a fundamental goal of ecology and evolution. A variety of biotic and abiotic factors may influence the process of community assembly, including – but not exclusively – competition, habitat filtering, species pool diversity, and dispersal capacity (Chase 2003). A variety of novel methods have been developed to incorporate phylogenetic information of coexisting lineages to investigate the mechanisms that control community structure, diversity, and assembly (Webb 2000; Webb et al 2002; Cavender-Bares et al 2009; Swenson 2013). Phylogenetic information may reveal the relative contributions of competitive exclusion and habitat filtering to community assembly.
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