Trait overdispersion in dragonflies reveals the role and drivers of competition in community assembly across space and season
Our understanding of how biotic interactions influence animal community assembly is largely restricted to local systems due to the difficulty of obtaining ecologically meaningful assemblage data across large spatial extents. Here, we used thousands of spatio-phenologically high-resolution assemblage...
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Zusammenfassung: | Our understanding of how biotic interactions influence animal community
assembly is largely restricted to local systems due to the difficulty of
obtaining ecologically meaningful assemblage data across large spatial
extents. Here, we used thousands of spatio-phenologically high-resolution
assemblages across three distinct European regions together with a
functional diversity approach to understand community assembly of
dragonflies and damselflies (Odonata), an insect group characterized by a
pronounced competitive reproductive biology. We found that adult
dragonfly, but not damselfly, assemblages were consistently composed of
species morphologically more different than expected by chance based on
the traits that enhance their inter-specific reproductive encounters.
These results provide consistent evidence for the role of competition in
the assembly of animal communities, which we interpret is most likely
caused by the territorial reproductive biology of dragonflies. Support for
competition varied both spatially and seasonally following theoretical
expectations, as it was strongest in locations and seasonal moments with
low thermal stress (i.e. warm conditions) and high niche packing. Our
study illustrates how spatio-temporal diversity patterns arise from
variation in assembly processes. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.7h44j101f |