Environmental Filtering Influences Functional Community Assembly of Epibenthic Communities
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24239Date
2021-11-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Community assembly theory states that species assemble non-randomly as a result of
dispersal limitation, biotic interactions, and environmental filtering. Strong environmental
filtering likely leads to local assemblages that are similar in their functional trait
composition (high trait convergence) while functional trait composition will be less
similar (high trait divergence) under weaker environmental filters. We used two Arctic
shelves as case studies to examine the relationship between functional community
assembly and environmental filtering using the geographically close but functionally and
environmentally dissimilar epibenthic communities on the Chukchi and Beaufort Sea
shelves. Environmental drivers were compared to functional trait composition and to
trait convergence within each shelf. Functional composition in the Chukchi Sea was
more strongly correlated with environmental gradients compared to the Beaufort Sea, as
shown by a combination of RLQ and fourth corner analyses and community-weighted
mean redundancy analyses. In the Chukchi Sea, epibenthic functional composition,
particularly body size, reproductive strategy, and several behavioral traits (i.e., feeding
habit, living habit, movement), was most strongly related to gradients in percent mud
and temperature while body size and larval development were most strongly related
to a depth gradient in the Beaufort Sea. The stronger environmental filter in the
Chukchi Sea also supported the hypothesized relationship with higher trait convergence,
although this relationship was only evident at one end of the observed environmental
gradient. Strong environmental filtering generally provides a challenge for biota and
can be a barrier for invading species, a growing concern for the Chukchi Sea shelf
communities under warming conditions. Weaker environmental filtering, such as on the
Beaufort Sea shelf, generally leads to communities that are more structured by biotic
interactions, and possibly representing partitioning of resources among species from
intermediate disturbance levels. We provide evidence that environmental filtering can
structure functional community composition, providing a baseline of how community
function could be affected by stressors such as changes in environmental conditions or
increased anthropogenic disturbance
Publisher
Frontiers MediaCitation
Sutton, Mueter, Bluhm B, Iken. Environmental Filtering Influences Functional Community Assembly of Epibenthic Communities. Frontiers in Marine Science. 2021;8:1-19Metadata
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