Structuring forces of intertidal infaunal communities on the northern coast of British Columbia, Canada: assessing the relative importance of top-down, bottom-up, middle-out, and abiotic variables

IF 2.9 3区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Facets Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1139/facets-2022-0199
T. Gerwing, Lily Campbell, D. Hamilton, M. A. Barbeau, Gregory S. Norris, Sarah E. Dudas, F. Juanes
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Abstract

While trophic and habitat-related abiotic variables (predation, competition, tolerance, etc.) are known to influence community structure in many ecosystems, some systems appear to be only minimally influenced by these variables. Sampling multiple tidal flat communities in northern BC, Canada, we investigated the relative importance of top-down and middle-out (mesopredators) variables, competition for resources (bottom up), and abiotic variables in structuring an infaunal community (invertebrates living in sediment). Similar to previous studies on mudflats in the Bay of Fundy (also at a north temperate latitude), we determined that these variables accounted for a minor (0%–9%) proportion of the observed variation in this infaunal community, suggesting that these variables play a small role in structuring this community. Based on the results of our study and in combination with previous experiments on infaunal recovery patterns post disturbance, we posit that the main factors influencing these infaunal communities likely operate at a scale of sites (kilometres) and(or) plot (metres or less) but not transects (10–100 m within site). Candidate forces structuring these intertidal communities that need future examination include regional species pools and the variables that affect these pools, sediment biogeochemistry, and disturbance/recovery history of a site. The similarity of our Pacific coast findings to those from the north temperate Atlantic coast suggests some similarity in the processes structuring these distinct infaunal communities.
加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省北部海岸潮间带动物群落的结构力:评估自上而下、自下而上、中间向外和非生物变量的相对重要性
虽然已知营养和与生境有关的非生物变量(捕食、竞争、耐受性等)会影响许多生态系统中的群落结构,但有些系统似乎只受到这些变量的最小影响。在加拿大卑诗省北部的多个潮滩群落中,我们调查了自上而下和中向外(中捕食者)变量、资源竞争(自下而上)和非生物变量在构建动物群落(生活在沉积物中的无脊椎动物)中的相对重要性。与之前对芬迪湾泥滩(同样位于北温带)的研究类似,我们确定这些变量占该动物群落观测到的变化的很小比例(0%-9%),这表明这些变量在该群落的结构中起着很小的作用。基于我们的研究结果,并结合之前关于干扰后动物恢复模式的实验,我们假设影响这些动物群落的主要因素可能在场地(公里)和(或)地块(米或更少)的尺度上起作用,而不是在样地(场地内10-100米)。构建这些潮间带群落的候选力量需要未来的研究,包括区域物种池和影响这些池的变量、沉积物生物地球化学和一个地点的干扰/恢复历史。我们在太平洋海岸的发现与在北温带大西洋海岸的发现的相似性表明,在这些不同的动物群落的结构过程中存在一些相似性。
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来源期刊
Facets
Facets MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES-
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
6.50%
发文量
48
审稿时长
28 weeks
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