Abstract

The ecological niche concept has regained interest under environmental change (e.g., climate change, eutrophication, and habitat destruction), especially to study the impacts on niche shift and conservatism. Here, we propose the within outlying mean indexes (WitOMI), which refine the outlying mean index (OMI) analysis by using its properties in combination with the K-select analysis species marginality decomposition. The purpose is to decompose the ecological niche into subniches associated with the experimental design, i.e., taking into account temporal and/or spatial subsets. WitOMI emphasize the habitat conditions that contribute (1) to the definition of species’ niches using all available conditions and, at the same time, (2) to the delineation of species’ subniches according to given subsets of dates or sites. The latter aspect allows addressing niche dynamics by highlighting the influence of atypical habitat conditions on species at a given time and/or space. Then, (3) the biological constraint exerted on the species subniche becomes observable within Euclidean space as the difference between the existing fundamental subniche and the realized subniche. We illustrate the decomposition of published OMI analyses, using spatial and temporal examples. The species assemblage’s subniches are comparable to the same environmental gradient, producing a more accurate and precise description of the assemblage niche distribution under environmental change. The WitOMI calculations are available in the open-access R package “subniche.”

Highlights

  • The ecological niche concept has been reactivated due to increasing concern over global environmental change, making the niche shift and the conservatism between different areas and time periods important fields of study (Peterson, 2011)

  • Inspired by the outlying mean index (OMI) analysis (Doledec, Chessel & Gimaret-Carpentier, 2000) and the decomposition of marginalities used in K-select analysis (Calenge, Dufour & Maillard, 2005), we propose to calculate two additional marginalities

  • within outlying mean indexes (WitOMI) complement the OMI approach by shifting how realized niches are perceived along fluctuating habitat conditions

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Summary

Introduction

The ecological niche concept has been reactivated due to increasing concern over global environmental change, making the niche shift and the conservatism between different areas and time periods important fields of study (Peterson, 2011). The ecological niche of a species can be decomposed into two related components (Hutchinson, 1957). The fundamental niche is the n-dimensional hypervolume within which the population. How to cite this article Karasiewicz et al (2017), Within outlying mean indexes: refining the OMI analysis for the realized niche decomposition. The realized niche is the proportion of the fundamental niche within which the species persist, i.e., taking into account the effect of abiotic and biological interactions. The fundamental niche cannot be measured by observation, but rather by broad examination of species’ physiological requirements using mechanistic approaches (Peterson et al, 2011). The realized niche, in a community context, is the “differential habitat preferences of species”

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