Abstract

Metacommunity ecology recognizes the interplay between local and regional patterns in contributing to spatial variation in community structure. In aquatic systems, the relative importance of such patterns depends mainly on the potential connectivity of the specific system. Thus, connectivity is expected to increase in relation to the degree of water movement, and to depend on the specific traits of the study organism. We examined the role of environmental and spatial factors in structuring benthic communities from a highly connected shallow beach network using a metacommunity approach. Both factors contributed to a varying degree to the structure of the local communities suggesting that environmental filters and dispersal-related mechanisms played key roles in determining abundance patterns. We categorized benthic taxa according to their dispersal mode (passive vs. active) and habitat specialization (generalist vs. specialist) to understand the relative importance of environment and dispersal related processes for shallow beach metacommunities. Passive dispersers were predicted by a combination of environmental and spatial factors, whereas active dispersers were not spatially structured and responded only to local environmental factors. Generalists were predicted primarily by spatial factors, while specialists were only predicted by local environmental factors. The results suggest that the role of the spatial component in metacommunity organization is greater in open coastal waters, such as shallow beaches, compared to less-connected environmentally controlled aquatic systems. Our results also reveal a strong environmental role in structuring the benthic metacommunity of shallow beaches. Specifically, we highlight the sensitivity of shallow beach macrofauna to environmental factors related to eutrophication proxies.

Highlights

  • Community ecology recognizes the joint influence of environmental and spatial factors in structuring communities [1,2]

  • Benthic community structure in shallow beaches. We found both environmental and spatial factors to be important for explaining variations in benthic community structure of the shallow beaches

  • Dispersal mode and habitat specialization in beach metacommunity dynamics. This supports the hypothesis that the role of the spatial component in aquatic systems is expected to increase following a theoretical increasing order of connectivity from isolated lakes over stream networks to coastal marine systems [12]

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Summary

Introduction

Community ecology recognizes the joint influence of environmental and spatial factors in structuring communities [1,2]. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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