TY - JOUR
T1 - Functional traits and environmental conditions predict community isotopic niches and energy pathways across spatial scales
AU - Dézerald, Olivier
AU - Srivastava, Diane S.
AU - Céréghino, Régis
AU - Carrias, Jean François
AU - Corbara, Bruno
AU - Farjalla, Vinicius F.
AU - Leroy, Céline
AU - Marino, Nicholas A.C.
AU - Piccoli, Gustavo C.O.
AU - Richardson, Barbara A.
AU - Richardson, Michael J.
AU - Romero, Gustavo Q.
AU - González, Angélica L.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study is a publication of the Bromeliad Working Group, initially funded by grants from the University of British Columbia and a NSERC E.W.R. Steacie Memorial Fellowship to D.S.S. V.F.F. and G.Q.R. are grateful to the Brazilian Council for Research, Development and Innovation (CNPq), and São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) for research funds and productivity grants. R.C. and D.S.S. wish to thank the CNRS Groupement de Recherche International EFF for financial support. O.D. received a postdoctoral fellowship provided by the Biology Department of Rutgers University-Camden and NACM received a postgraduate scholarship from CAPES (PNPD/CAPES grant number 20130877). B.A.R. and M.J.R. were funded by grant DEB-0620910 from the National Science Foundation to the Institute for Tropical Ecosystems Studies, University of Puerto Rico, and the International Institute of Tropical Forestry, as part of the Luquillo Long-Term Ecological Research program in the Luquillo Experimental Forest, and USDA IITF Grant 01-1G11120101-001. B.C., C.L., J.-F.C., O.D. and R.C. wish to thank the members of Hydréco (Laboratoire Environnement Petit Saut) for field and technical support. This work was supported in French Guiana by an “Investissement d’Avenir” grant managed by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (CEBA, ref. ANR-10-LABX-25-01). The assistant editor, Jennifer Meyer, and two anonymous reviewers provided helpful comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. The achievement of this manuscript has not been influenced by competing financial, personal or professional interests.
Funding Information:
USDA IITF, Grant/Award Number: 01- 1G11120101-001; NSERC E.W.R. Steacie Memorial Fellowship; São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP); ANR, Grant/Award Number: ANR-10-LABX-25-01; National Science Foundation to the Institute for Tropical Ecosystems Studies, Grant/Award Number: DEB-0620910; Brazilian Council for Research, Development and Innovation (CNPq); CNRS Groupement de Recherche International EFF; Biology Department of Rutgers University-Camden; CAPES, Grant/ Award Number: 20130877; University of Puerto Rico; International Institute of Tropical Forestry; Luquillo Long-Term Ecological Research program in the Luquillo Experimental Forest
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Authors. Functional Ecology © 2018 British Ecological Society
PY - 2018/10
Y1 - 2018/10
N2 - Despite ongoing research in food web ecology and functional biogeography, the links between food web structure, functional traits and environmental conditions across spatial scales remain poorly understood. Trophic niches, defined as the amount of energy and elemental space occupied by species and food webs, may help bridge this divide. Here, we ask how the functional traits of species, the environmental conditions of habitats and the spatial scale of analysis jointly determine the characteristics of trophic niches. We used isotopic niches as a proxy of trophic niches, and conducted analyses at spatial scales ranging from local food webs and metacommunities to geographically distant sites. We sampled aquatic macroinvertebrates from 104 tank bromeliads distributed across five sites from Central to South America and compiled the macroinvertebrates’ functional traits and stable isotope values (δ15N and δ13C). We assessed how isotopic niches within each bromeliad were influenced by the functional trait composition of their associated invertebrates and environmental conditions (i.e., habitat size, canopy cover [CC] and detrital concentration [DC]). We then evaluated whether the diet of dominant predators and, consequently, energy pathways within food webs reflected functional and environmental changes among bromeliads across sites. At last, we determined the extent to which the isotopic niches of macroinvertebrates within each bromeliad contributed to the metacommunity isotopic niches within each site and compared these metacommunity-level niches over biogeographic scales. At the bromeliad level, isotopic niches increased with the functional richness of species in the food web and the DC in the bromeliad. The diet of top predators tracked shifts in prey biomass along gradients of CC and DC. Bromeliads that grew under heterogeneous CC displayed less trophic redundancy and therefore combined to form larger metacommunity isotopic niches. At last, the size of metacommunity niches depended on within-site heterogeneity in CC. Our results suggest that the trophic niches occupied by food webs can predictably scale from local food webs to metacommunities to biogeographic regions. This scaling process is determined by both the functional traits of species and heterogeneity in environmental conditions. A plain language summary is available for this article.
AB - Despite ongoing research in food web ecology and functional biogeography, the links between food web structure, functional traits and environmental conditions across spatial scales remain poorly understood. Trophic niches, defined as the amount of energy and elemental space occupied by species and food webs, may help bridge this divide. Here, we ask how the functional traits of species, the environmental conditions of habitats and the spatial scale of analysis jointly determine the characteristics of trophic niches. We used isotopic niches as a proxy of trophic niches, and conducted analyses at spatial scales ranging from local food webs and metacommunities to geographically distant sites. We sampled aquatic macroinvertebrates from 104 tank bromeliads distributed across five sites from Central to South America and compiled the macroinvertebrates’ functional traits and stable isotope values (δ15N and δ13C). We assessed how isotopic niches within each bromeliad were influenced by the functional trait composition of their associated invertebrates and environmental conditions (i.e., habitat size, canopy cover [CC] and detrital concentration [DC]). We then evaluated whether the diet of dominant predators and, consequently, energy pathways within food webs reflected functional and environmental changes among bromeliads across sites. At last, we determined the extent to which the isotopic niches of macroinvertebrates within each bromeliad contributed to the metacommunity isotopic niches within each site and compared these metacommunity-level niches over biogeographic scales. At the bromeliad level, isotopic niches increased with the functional richness of species in the food web and the DC in the bromeliad. The diet of top predators tracked shifts in prey biomass along gradients of CC and DC. Bromeliads that grew under heterogeneous CC displayed less trophic redundancy and therefore combined to form larger metacommunity isotopic niches. At last, the size of metacommunity niches depended on within-site heterogeneity in CC. Our results suggest that the trophic niches occupied by food webs can predictably scale from local food webs to metacommunities to biogeographic regions. This scaling process is determined by both the functional traits of species and heterogeneity in environmental conditions. A plain language summary is available for this article.
KW - energy pathways
KW - environmental heterogeneity
KW - food webs
KW - functional biogeography
KW - functional diversity
KW - isotopic niche
KW - metacommunity
KW - trophic structure
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U2 - 10.1111/1365-2435.13142
DO - 10.1111/1365-2435.13142
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85054339239
SN - 0269-8463
VL - 32
SP - 2423
EP - 2434
JO - Functional Ecology
JF - Functional Ecology
IS - 10
ER -