High dimensionality of stoichiometric niches in soil fauna
The ecological niche is a fundamental concept to understand species coexistence in natural communities. The recently developed framework of the multidimensional stoichiometric niche (MSN) characterizes species niches using chemical elements in living organisms. Despite the fact that living organisms...
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Zusammenfassung: | The ecological niche is a fundamental concept to understand species
coexistence in natural communities. The recently developed framework of
the multidimensional stoichiometric niche (MSN) characterizes species
niches using chemical elements in living organisms. Despite the fact that
living organisms are composed by multiple elements, stoichiometric studies
have so far mostly focused on carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus
(P), and therefore a quantitative analysis of the dimensionality of the
MSN in living organisms is still lacking, particularly for animals. Here
we quantified ten elements composing the biomass of nine soil animal taxa
(958 individuals) from three trophic groups. We found that all ten
elements exhibited large variation among taxa, which was partially
explained by their phylogeny. Overlaps of MSNs among the nine soil animal
taxa were relatively smaller based on ten elements, compared with those
based on only C, N, and P. Discriminant analysis using all ten elements
successfully differentiated among the nine taxa (accuracy: 90%), whereas
that using only C, N, and P resulted in a lower accuracy (60%). Our
findings provide new evidence for MSN differentiation in soil fauna and
demonstrate the high dimensionality of organismal stoichiometric niches
beyond C, N, and P. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.g1jwstqsx |