Data from: A novel multi-scale assessment of community assembly across time, space, and functional niche
A basic ecological tenet is that organisms in a community occupy different niches and have different traits, but how consistently competition, selection, and phylogenetic effects structure communities remains uncertain. Are all communities created equal? We examine how mammalian carnivoran communiti...
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Zusammenfassung: | A basic ecological tenet is that organisms in a community occupy different
niches and have different traits, but how consistently competition,
selection, and phylogenetic effects structure communities remains
uncertain. Are all communities created equal? We examine how mammalian
carnivoran communities are assembled with regard to mass, diet, and
locomotion. Here, we use a multivariate nearest-neighbor framework to
examine multiple North American localities spanning 3 million years to
determine whether community assembly is consistent through time and four
modern localities around the world to assess the effects of habitat.
Additionally, we examined how trait patterns differ among families and how
family-level evolutionary effects affect them. We found some broadly
consistent patterns, although differences are more pronounced than
similarities. Diet is more affected by evolutionary constraints than by
time or place. Locomotion is most affected by habitat, and the ability to
partition niches is related to habitat heterogeneity. Mass is influenced
by family, but also by habitat and the mass-selective extinction events at
the end-Pleistocene. These findings indicate that assembly patterns are
not largely determined by within-community interactions but instead show
that each community is a product of its independent variables. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.j16p2 |