978 resultados para community assembly


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O reservatório da UHE Coaracy Nunes no rio Araguari esta localizado entre os municípios de Ferreira Gomes e Porto Grande no estado do Amapá-Brasil, distando 200 km do Oceano Atlântico. A usina Coaracy Nunes foi a primeira hidrelétrica a ser construída na Amazônia brasileira, tendo suas obras iniciadas em 1967. O rio Araguari e o principal rio do estado do Amapá e representa fonte de geração de renda através da pesca, atividades agropecuárias em sua várzea, navegação, mineração, geração de energia e lazer. O presente estudo teve por objetivo avaliar as alterações impostas pela construção do reservatório da UHE Coaracy Nunes, através das assembleias de peixes de quatro áreas de influencia direta desta usina. Para isso, no período de maio de 2009 a julho de 2010, foram realizadas coletas bimensais, de peixes, com redes de malhas padronizadas variando de 1,0 a 10,0 cm entre nos adjacentes e outras técnicas auxiliares. A partir destas coletas, no capitulo 1 foi verificado a composição, abundancia (CPUEn) e biomassa (CPUEp) relativas da ictiofauna, eficiência amostral (curva do coletor, curva de rarefação e Jacknife) e descritores ecológicos de comunidades (riqueza, diversidade, equitabilidade e dominância) das assembleias das quatro áreas. Foram efetuadas analises de variância (ANOVA: bifatorial), Kruskal-Wallis, teste-T e Mann-Whitney para verificar se havia diferenças significativas dos descritores entre as áreas e períodos sazonais. Estas análises foram corroboradas por analises multivariadas de agrupamento (cluster), ordenamento (MDS), Anosim e Simper. No capitulo 2, os estados ecológicos das quatro áreas foram verificados utilizando como indicadores: curvas espécie abundancia, curvas K-dominância e curvas ABC, assim como modelos espécie-abundancia serie geométrica, log serie, log normal e broken stick, e modelo de regressão linear de espectros de tamanho. No capitulo 3, a estrutura trófica foi estimada a partir da categorização das espécies de cada área em 5 guildas: piscívora, onívora, detritívora, carnívora e herbívora. A abundancia, biomassa e índices ecológicos destas guildas foram estimados e verificados suas variações espaço-temporais, por analises de variância (ANOVA: bifatorial e Kruskal-Wallis) e teste t. No capitulo 4, a dieta das espécies mais abundantes das assembleias de cada área foi verificada e suas variações espaço-temporais detectadas por analise de variância (ANOVA: bifatorial e Kruskal-Wallis). Também foram estimados a amplitude e sobreposição de nicho das espécies mais abundantes, assim como a existência de competição entre as espécies através de modelagem nula. No capitulo 5 foi realizada a avaliação ecossistêmica das quatro áreas através de modelos de fluxo de biomassa na rede trófica do ecossistema, usando como instrumento de modelação o software Ecopath. Essas análises tinham por objetivo descrever as variações dos atributos ecológicos que quantificam as propriedades de maturidade, estabilidade e resiliência ecossistêmica que pudessem refletir os estados ecológicos dessas áreas. O modelo incluiu compartimentos funcionais desde produtores primários ate predadores de topo. No geral, todas as análises indicaram sensíveis alterações na ictiofauna atribuídas a implantação da UHE Coaracy Nunes, que se refletem nos três níveis de organização: ecossistema, comunidade (assembleia) e guilda. Os resultados indicaram a captura de 1.977 peixes distribuídos em 2 classes, 9 ordens, 23 famílias, 73 gêneros e 108 espécies. As curvas de acumulação de espécies e curvas de rarefação individualizadas demonstraram que houve suficiência amostral nas áreas Reservatório e Lacustre. Os resultados mostraram que a área Jusante foi mais rica, diversa e equitativa em relação as demais e que a sazonalidade não influenciou na variação destes índices. A abundancia relativa (CPUEn) foi superior nas áreas Reservatório e Lacustre e a biomassa relativa (CPUEb) foi superior na área Jusante, não havendo diferenças sazonais para esses descritores em todas as áreas. As analises de agrupamento (cluster) e ordenamento (MDS) da ictiofauna permitiram identificar a formação de três assembleias distintas: Jusante, Montante e uma assembleia que compreende as áreas Reservatório e Lacustre, ratificando a similaridade dessas duas áreas. Os resultados das curvas whitakeplot, ABC e K-dominância, assim como o ajuste satisfatório do modelo broken stick e os padrões das curvas de espectro de tamanho para a assembleia da área a jusante indicam que esta área foi a mais equilibrada em termos ecológicos. Nas áreas Lacustre e Reservatório, os resultados tanto do ajuste ao modelo serie geométrica, quanto os resultados das curvas whitake-plot, ABC e K-dominância e o espectro de tamanho, assim como os resultados das curvas e ajustes ao modelo série e menor espectro de tamanho para a assembleia da área Reservatório, refletem que os peixes destas áreas, em sua maioria, são indivíduos pequenos com elevada dominância e baixa equitabilidade, caracterizando comunidades típicas de áreas impactadas. A estrutura trófica das assembleias de peixes das áreas represadas (Reservatório e Lacustre) foram formatadas em função do barramento do rio, que isolou e fragmentou o ambiente, determinando sua modificação física, impondo o estabelecimento de uma ictiofauna de espécies pré-adaptadas as condições ambientais de represamento, diferente, em parte, da estrutura da ictiofauna fluvial pre-barramento, destacando as piscívoras, onívoras e detritívoras, que foram as mais ricas e abundantes em função da disponibilidade, nas duas áreas, dos recursos alimentares de sua preferencia. Os resultados demonstraram que as dietas das assembleias de todas as áreas foram similares quanto ao predomínio do consumo de peixes e detritos, seguidos de alimento vegetal aloctone, revelando um padrão com poucos nichos amplos e uma concentração maior de espécies com nichos mais estreitos. Contudo, o padrão de baixa amplitude trófica foi evidenciado pelo predomínio da guilda piscívora, somada as guildas detritívora e herbívora. A sazonalidade pouco influenciou na alimentação da maioria das espécies em todas as áreas. Os padrões comparativos da dieta entre as áreas Montante e Jusante com as áreas Reservatório e Lacustre indicam que a maioria das espécies das áreas represadas pertenciam as guildas piscívora, onívora e detritívora antes do barramento do rio, que colonizaram estes ambientes, influenciadas, principalmente, pela abundancia dos recursos alimentares de suas preferencias e das condições físicas ambientais favoráveis. Interações competitivas foram evidenciadas pelos modelos nulos, sugerindo que a competição também foi um fator importante na estruturação das assembleias. Ecossistemicamente, os quatro modelos de fluxo de biomassa representam ecossistemas com elevada produção primaria oriunda da floresta riparia e algas filamentosas, que são utilizadas parcialmente. A cadeia trófica baseada em detrito apresentou ser mais importante que a que tem como base a produção primaria nas áreas Reservatório e Lacustre. A maioria dos fluxos ocorre nos compartimentos de níveis tróficos baixos. As propriedades ecossistêmicas da área Jusante indicam que este ambiente se encontra mais desenvolvido e maduro em relação aos outros, caracterizado por resiliência e entropia altas. As áreas represadas (Reservatório e Lacustre) apresentaram atributos ecossistêmicos que lhe conferiram características de menos resiliente e menos maduro que as áreas de rio. A área Montante apresentou um padrão intermediário de resiliência, estabilidade e maturidade. Esses resultados evidenciam que apos quarenta anos da construção da barragem do reservatório de Coaracy Nunes, a fragmentação do ambiente proporcionou alterações ecossistêmicas negativas, refletidas nas assembleias de peixes das áreas acima do barramento e na analise ecossistêmica, evidenciando que a área jusante apresenta características de ambiente em bom estado ecológico, com baixa alteração de origem antrópica e capaz de suportar distúrbios.

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Background: Soil microbial communities are in constant change at many different temporal and spatial scales. However, the importance of these changes to the turnover of the soil microbial communities has been rarely studied simultaneously in space and time. Methodology/Principal Findings: In this study, we explored the temporal and spatial responses of soil bacterial, archaeal and fungal beta-diversities to abiotic parameters. Taking into account data from a 3-year sampling period, we analyzed the abundances and community structures of Archaea, Bacteria and Fungi along with key soil chemical parameters. We questioned how these abiotic variables influence the turnover of bacterial, archaeal and fungal communities and how they impact the long-term patterns of changes of the aforementioned soil communities. Interestingly, we found that the bacterial and fungal b-diversities are quite stable over time, whereas archaeal diversity showed significantly higher fluctuations. These fluctuations were reflected in temporal turnover caused by soil management through addition of N-fertilizers. Conclusions: Our study showed that management practices applied to agricultural soils might not significantly affect the bacterial and fungal communities, but cause slow and long-term changes in the abundance and structure of the archaeal community. Moreover, the results suggest that, to different extents, abiotic and biotic factors determine the community assembly of archaeal, bacterial and fungal communities.

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Phylogenetic diversity (PD) has been successfully used as a complement to classical measures of biological diversity such as species richness or functional diversity. By considering the phylogenetic history of species, PD broadly summarizes the trait space within a community. This covers amongst others complex physiological or biochemical traits that are often not considered in estimates of functional diversity, but may be important for the understanding of community assembly and the relationship between diversity and ecosystem functions. In this study we analyzed the relationship between PD of plant communities and land-use intensification in 150 local grassland plots in three regions in Germany. Specifically we asked whether PD decreases with land-use intensification and if so, whether the relationship is robust across different regions. Overall, we found that species richness decreased along land-use gradients the results however differed for common and rare species assemblages. PD only weakly decreased with increasing land-use intensity. The strength of the relationship thereby varied among regions and PD metrics used. From our results we suggest that there is no general relationship between PD and land-use intensification probably due to lack of phylogenetic conservatism in land- use sensitive traits. Nevertheless, we suggest that depending on specific regional idiosyncrasies the consideration of PD as a complement to other measures of diversity can be useful.

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Characterization of spatial and temporal variation in grassland productivity and nutrition is crucial for a comprehensive understanding of ecosystem function. Although within-site heterogeneity in soil and plant properties has been shown to be relevant for plant community stability, spatiotemporal variability in these factors is still understudied in temperate grasslands. Our study aimed to detect if soil characteristics and plant diversity could explain observed small-scale spatial and temporal variability in grassland productivity, biomass nutrient concentrations, and nutrient limitation. Therefore, we sampled 360 plots of 20 cm × 20 cm each at six consecutive dates in an unfertilized grassland in Southern Germany. Nutrient limitation was estimated using nutrient ratios in plant biomass. Absolute values of, and spatial variability in, productivity, biomass nutrient concentrations, and nutrient limitation were strongly associated with sampling date. In April, spatial heterogeneity was high and most plots showed phosphorous deficiency, while later in the season nitrogen was the major limiting nutrient. Additionally, a small significant positive association between plant diversity and biomass phosphorus concentrations was observed, but should be tested in more detail. We discuss how low biological activity e.g., of soil microbial organisms might have influenced observed heterogeneity of plant nutrition in early spring in combination with reduced active acquisition of soil resources by plants. These early-season conditions are particularly relevant for future studies as they differ substantially from more thoroughly studied later season conditions. Our study underlines the importance of considering small spatial scales and temporal variability to better elucidate mechanisms of ecosystem functioning and plant community assembly.

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Extreme weather events can have negative impacts on species survival and community structure when surpassing lethal thresholds. Extreme winter warming events in the Arctic rapidly melt snow and expose ecosystems to unseasonably warm air (2-10 °C for 2-14 days), but returning to cold winter climate exposes the ecosystem to lower temperatures by the loss of insulating snow. Soil animals, which play an integral part in soil processes, may be very susceptible to such events depending on the intensity of soil warming and low temperatures following these events. We simulated week-long extreme winter warming events - using infrared heating lamps, alone or with soil warming cables - for two consecutive years in a sub-Arctic dwarf shrub heathland. Minimum temperatures were lower and freeze-thaw cycles were 2-11 times more frequent in treatment plots compared with control plots. Following the second event, Acari populations decreased by 39%; primarily driven by declines of Prostigmata (69%) and the Mesostigmatic nymphs (74%). A community-weighted vertical stratification shift occurred from smaller soil dwelling (eu-edaphic) Collembola species dominance to larger litter dwelling (hemi-edaphic) species dominance in the canopy-with-soil warming plots compared with controls. The most susceptible groups to these winter warming events were the smallest individuals (Prostigmata and eu-edaphic Collembola). This was not apparent from abundance data at the Collembola taxon level, indicating that life forms and species traits play a major role in community assembly following extreme events. The observed shift in soil community can cascade down to the micro-flora affecting plant productivity and mineralization rates. Short-term extreme weather events have the potential to shift community composition through trait composition with potentially large consequences for ecosystem development.

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Models and data used to describe species-area relationships confound sampling with ecological process as they fail to acknowledge that estimates of species richness arise due to sampling. This compromises our ability to make ecological inferences from and about species-area relationships. We develop and illustrate hierarchical community models of abundance and frequency to estimate species richness. The models we propose separate sampling from ecological processes by explicitly accounting for the fact that sampled patches are seldom completely covered by sampling plots and that individuals present in the sampling plots are imperfectly detected. We propose a multispecies abundance model in which community assembly is treated as the summation of an ensemble of species-level Poisson processes and estimate patch-level species richness as a derived parameter. We use sampling process models appropriate for specific survey methods. We propose a multispecies frequency model that treats the number of plots in which a species occurs as a binomial process. We illustrate these models using data collected in surveys of early-successional bird species and plants in young forest plantation patches. Results indicate that only mature forest plant species deviated from the constant density hypothesis, but the null model suggested that the deviations were too small to alter the form of species-area relationships. Nevertheless, results from simulations clearly show that the aggregate pattern of individual species density-area relationships and occurrence probability-area relationships can alter the form of species-area relationships. The plant community model estimated that only half of the species present in the regional species pool were encountered during the survey. The modeling framework we propose explicitly accounts for sampling processes so that ecological processes can be examined free of sampling artefacts. Our modeling approach is extensible and could be applied to a variety of study designs and allows the inclusion of additional environmental covariates.

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El concepto tradicional de reglas de ensamblaje refleja la idea de que las especies no co-ocurren al azar sino que están restringidos en su co-ocurrencia por la competencia interespecífica o por un filtrado ambiental. En está tesis abordé la importancia de los procesos que determinan el ensamble de la comunidad en la estructuración de los Bosques Secos en el Sur del Ecuador. Este estudio se realizó en la región biogeográfica Tumbesina, donde se encuentra la mayor concentración de bosques secos tropicales bien conservados del sur de Ecuador, y que constituyen una de las áreas de endemismo más importantes del mundo. El clima se caracteriza por una estación seca que va desde mayo a diciembre y una estación lluviosa de enero a abril, su temperatura anual varía entre 20°C y 26°C y una precipitación promedio anual entre 300 y 700 mm. Mi primer tema fue orientado a evaluar si la distribución de los rasgos funcionales a nivel comunitario es compatible con la existencia de un filtro ambiental (filtrado del hábitat) o con la existencia de un proceso de limitación de la semejanza funcional impuesta por la competencia inter-específica entre 58 especies de plantas leñosas repartidas en 109 parcelas (10x50m). Para ello, se analizó la distribución de los valores de cinco rasgos funcionales (altura máxima, densidad de la madera, área foliar específica, tamaño de la hoja y de masa de la semilla), resumida mediante varios estadísticos (rango, varianza, kurtosis y la desviación estándar de la distribución de distancias funcionales a la especies más próxima) y se comparó con la distribución esperada bajo un modelo nulo con ausencia de competencia. Los resultados obtenidos apoyan que tanto el filtrado ambiental como la limitación a la semejanza afectan el ensamble de las comunidades vegetales de los bosques secos Tumbesinos. Un segundo tema fue identificar si la diversidad funcional está condicionada por los gradientes ambientales, y en concreto si disminuye en los ambientes más estresantes a causa del filtrado ambiental, y si por el contrario aumenta en los ambientes más benignos donde la competencia se vuelve más importante, teniendo en cuenta las posibles modificaciones a este patrón general a causa de las interacciones de facilitación. Para abordar este estudio analizamos tanto las variaciones en la diversidad funcional (respecto a los de los cinco rasgos funcionales empleados en el primer capítulo de la tesis) como las variaciones de diversidad filogenética a lo largo de un gradiente de estrés climático en los bosques tumbesinos, y se contrastaron frente a las diversidades esperadas bajo un modelo de ensamblaje completamente aleatorio de la comunidad. Los análisis mostraron que tan sólo la diversidad de tamaños foliares siguió el patrón de variación esperado, disminuyendo a medida que aumentó el estrés abiótico mientras que ni el resto de rasgos funcionales ni la diversidad funcional multivariada ni la diversidad filogenética mostraron una variación significativa a lo largo del gradiente ambiental. Un tercer tema fue evaluar si los procesos que organizan la estructura funcional de la comunidad operan a diferentes escalas espaciales. Para ello cartografié todos los árboles y arbustos de más de 5 cm de diámetro en una parcela de 9 Ha de bosque seco y caractericé funcionalmente todas las especies. Dicha parcela fue dividida en subparcelas de diferente tamaño, obteniéndose subparcelas a seis escalas espaciales distintas. Los resultados muestran agregación de estrategias funcionales semejantes a escalas pequeñas, lo que sugiere la existencia bien de filtros ambientales actuando a escala fina o bien de procesos competitivos que igualan la estrategia óptima a dichas escalas. Finalmente con la misma información de la parcela permanente de 9 Ha. Nos propusimos evaluar el efecto y comportamiento de las especies respecto a la organización de la diversidad taxonómica, funcional y filogenética. Para ello utilicé tres funciones sumario espaciales: ISAR- para el nivel taxonómico, IFDAR para el nivel funcional y IPSVAR para el nivel filogenética y las contrastamos frente a modelos nulos que describen la distribución espacial de las especies individuales. Los resultados mostraron que en todas las escalas espaciales consideradas para ISAR, IFDAR y IPSVAR, la mayoría de las especies se comportaron como neutras, es decir, que están rodeados por la riqueza de diversidad semejante a la esperada. Sin embargo, algunas especies aparecieron como acumuladoras de diversidad funcional y filogenética, lo que sugiere su implicación en procesos competitivos de limitación de la semejanza. Una pequeña proporción de las especies apareció como repelente de la diversidad funcional y filogenética, lo que sugiere su implicación en un proceso de filtrado de hábitat. En este estudio pone de relieve cómo el análisis de las dimensiones alternativas de la biodiversidad, como la diversidad funcional y filogenética, puede ayudarnos a entender la co-ocurrencia de especies en diversos ensambles de comunidad. Todos los resultados de este estudio aportan nuevas evidencias de los procesos de ensamblaje de la comunidad de los Bosques Estacionalmente secos y como las variables ambientales y la competencia juegan un papel importante en la estructuración de la comunidad. ABSTRACT The traditional concept of the rules assembly for species communities reflects the idea that species do not co-occur at random but are restricted in their co-occurrence by interspecific competition or an environmental filter. In this thesis, I addressed the importance of the se processes in the assembly of plant communities in the dry forests of southern Ecuador. This study was conducted in the biogeographic region of Tumbesina has the largest concentration of well-conserved tropical dry forests of southern Ecuador, and is recognized as one of the most important areas of endemism in the world. The climate is characterized by a dry season from May to December and a rainy season from January to April. The annual temperature varies between 20 ° C and 26 ° C and an average annual rainfall between 300 and 700 mm. I first assessed whether the distribution of functional traits at the level of the community is compatible with the existence of an environmental filter (imposed by habitat) or the existence of a limitation on functional similarity imposed by interspecific competition. This analysis was conducted for 58 species of woody plants spread over 109 plots of 10 x 50 m. Specifically, I compared the distribution of values of five functional traits (maximum height, wood density, specific leaf area, leaf size and mass of the seed), via selected statistical properties (range, variance, kurtosis and analyzed the standard deviation of the distribution of the closest functional species) distances and compared with a expected distribution under a null model of no competition. The results support that both environmental filtering and a limitation on trait similarity affect the assembly of plant communities in dry forests Tumbesina. My second chapter evaluated whether variation in functional diversity is conditioned by environmental gradients. In particular, I tested whether it decreases in the most stressful environments because of environmental filters, or if, on the contrary, functional diversity is greater in more benign environments where competition becomes more important (notwithstanding possible changes to this general pattern due to facilitation). To address this theme I analyzed changes in both the functional diversity (maximum height, wood density, specific leaf area, leaf size and mass of the seed) and the phylogenetic diversity, along a gradient of climatic stress in Tumbes forests. The observed patterns of variation were contrasted against the diversity expected under a completely random null model of community assembly. Only the diversity of leaf sizes followed the hypothesis decreasing in as trait variation abiotic stress increased, while the other functional traits multivariate functional diversity and phylogenetic diversity no showed significant variation along the environmental gradient. The third theme assess whether the processes that organize the functional structure of the community operate at different spatial scales. To do this I mapped all the trees and shrubs of more than 5 cm in diameter within a plot of 9 hectares of dry forest and functionally classified each species. The plot was divided into subplots of different sizes, obtaining subplots of six different spatial scales. I found aggregation of similar functional strategies at small scales, which may indicate the existence of environmental filters or competitive processes that correspond to the optimal strategy for these fine scales. Finally, with the same information from the permanent plot of 9 ha, I evaluated the effect and behavior of individual species on the organization of the taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic diversity. The analysis comprised three spatial summary functions: ISAR- for taxonomic level analysis, IFDAR for functional level analysis, and IPSVAR for phylogenetic level analysis, in each case the pattern of diversity was contrasted against null models that randomly reallocate describe the spatial distribution of individual species and their traits. For all spatial scales considering ISAR, IFDAR and IPSVAR, most species behaved as neutral, i.e. they are surrounded by the diversity of other traits similar to that expected under a null model. However, some species appeared as accumulator of functional and phylogenetic diversity, suggesting that they may play a role in competitive processes that limiting similarity. A small proportion of the species appeared as repellent of functional and phylogenetic diversity, suggesting their involvement in a process of habitat filtering. These analysis highlights that the analysis of alternative dimensions of biodiversity, such as functional and phylogenetic diversity, can help us understand the co-occurrence of species in the assembly of biotic communities. All results of this study provide further evidence of the processes of assembly of the community of the seasonally dry forests as environmental variables and competition play an important role in structuring the community.

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Species accumulation curves (SACs) chart the increase in recovery of new species as a function of some measure of sampling effort. Studies of parasite diversity can benefit from the application of SACs, both as empirical tools to guide sampling efforts and predict richness, and because their properties are informative about community patterns and the structure of parasite diversity. SACs can be used to infer interactivity in parasite infra-communities, to partition species richness into contributions from different spatial scales and different levels of the host hierarchy (individuals, populations and communities) or to identify modes of community assembly (niche versus dispersal). A historical tendency to treat individual hosts as statistically equivalent replicates (quadrats) seemingly satisfies the sample-based subgroup of SACs but care is required in this because of the inequality of hosts as sampling units. Knowledge of the true distribution of parasite richness over multiple host-derived and spatial scales is far from complete but SACs can improve the understanding of diversity patterns in parasite assemblages.

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In this study three aspects of sexual reproduction in Everglades plants were examined to more clearly understand seed dispersal and the allocation of resources to sexual reproduction—spatial dispersal process, temporal dispersal of seeds (seedbank), and germination patterns in the dominant species, sawgrass (Cladium jamaicense). Community assembly rules for fruit dispersal were deduced by analysis of functional traits associated with this process. Seedbank ecology was investigated by monitoring emergence of germinants from sawgrass soil samples held under varying water depths to determine the fate of dispersed seeds. Fine-scale study of sawgrass fruits yielded information on contributions to variation in sexually produced propagules in this species, which primarily reproduces vegetatively. It was hypothesized that Everglades plants possess a set of functional traits that enhance diaspore dispersal. To test this, 14 traits were evaluated among 51 species by factor analysis. The factorial plot of this analysis generated groups of related traits, with four suites of traits forming dispersal syndromes. Hydrochory traits were categorized by buoyancy and appendages enhancing buoyancy. Anemochory traits were categorized by diaspore size and appendages enhancing air movement. Epizoochory traits were categorized by diaspore size, buoyancy, and appendages allowing for attachment. Endozoochory traits were categorized by diaspore size, buoyancy, and appendages aiding diaspore presentation. These patterns/trends of functional trait organization also represent dispersal community assembly rules. Seeds dispersed by hydrochory were hypothesized to be caught most often in the edge of the north side of sawgrass patches. Patterns of germination and dispersal mode of all hydrochorous macrophytes with propagules in the seedbank were elucidated by germination analysis from 90 soil samples collected from 10 sawgrass patches. Mean site seed density was 486 seeds/m2 from 13 species. Most seeds collected at the north side of patches and significantly in the outer one meter of the patch edge (p = 0.013). Sawgrass seed germination was hypothesized to vary by site, among individual plants, and within different locations of a plant’s infructescence. An analysis of sawgrass fruits with nested ANOVAs found that collection site and interaction of site x individual plant significantly affect germination ability, seed viability, and fruit size (p ≤ 0.050). Fruit location within a plant’s infructescence did not significantly affect germination. As for allocation of resources to sexual reproduction, only 17.9% of sawgrass seeds germinated and only 4.8% of ungerminated seeds with fleshy endosperm were presumed viable, but dormant. Collectively, only 22% of all sawgrass seeds produced were viable.

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Seascape ecology provides a useful framework from which to understand the processes governing spatial variability in ecological patterns. Seascape context, or the composition and pattern of habitat surrounding a focal patch, has the potential to impact resource availability, predator-prey interactions, and connectivity with other habitats. For my dissertation research, I combined a variety of approaches to examine how habitat quality for fishes is influenced by a diverse range of seascape factors in sub-tropical, back-reef ecosystems. In the first part of my dissertation, I examined how seascape context can affect reef fish communities on an experimental array of artificial reefs created in various seascape contexts in Abaco, Bahamas. I found that the amount of seagrass at large spatial scales was an important predictor of community assembly on these reefs. Additionally, seascape context had differing effects on various aspects of habitat quality for the most common reef species, White grunt Haemulon plumierii. The amount of seagrass at large spatial scales had positive effects on fish abundance and secondary production, but not on metrics of condition and growth. The second part of my dissertation focused on how foraging conditions for fish varied across a linear seascape gradient in the Loxahatchee River estuary in Florida, USA. Gray snapper, Lutjanus griseus, traded food quality for quantity along this estuarine gradient, maintaining similar growth rates and condition among sites. Additional work focused on identifying major energy flow pathways to two consumers in oyster-reef food webs in the Loxahatchee. Algal and microphytobenthos resource pools supported most of the production to these consumers, and body size for one of the consumers mediated food web linkages with surrounding mangrove habitats. All of these studies examined a different facet of the importance of seascape context in governing ecological processes occurring in focal habitats and underscore the role of connectivity among habitats in back-reef systems. The results suggest that management approaches consider the surrounding seascape when prioritizing areas for conservation or attempting to understand the impacts of seascape change on focal habitat patches. For this reason, spatially-based management approaches are recommended to most effectively manage back-reef systems.

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We evaluated metacommunity hypotheses of landscape arrangement (indicative of dispersal limitation) and environmental gradients (hydroperiod and nutrients) in structuring macroinvertebrate and fish communities in the southern Everglades. We used samples collected at sites from the eastern boundary of the southern Everglades and from Shark River Slough, to evaluate the role of these factors in metacommunity structure. We used eigenfunction spatial analysis to model community structure among sites and distance-based redundancy analysis to partition the variability in communities between spatial and environmental filters. For most animal communities, hydrological parameters had a greater influence on structure than nutrient enrichment, however both had large effects. The influence of spatial effects indicative of dispersal limitation was weak and only periphyton infauna appeared to be limited by regional dispersal. At the landscape scale, communities were well-mixed, but strongly influenced by hydrology. Local-scale species dominance was influenced by water-permanence and nutrient enrichment. Nutrient enrichment is limited to water inflow points associated with canals, which may explain its impact in this data set. Hydroperiod and nutrient enrichment are controlled by water managers; our analysis indicates that the decisions they make have strong effects on the communities at the base of the Everglades food web.

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In this study three aspects of sexual reproduction in Everglades plants were examined to more clearly understand seed dispersal and the allocation of resources to sexual reproduction— spatial dispersal process, temporal dispersal of seeds (seedbank), and germination patterns in the dominant species, sawgrass (Cladium jamaicense). Community assembly rules for fruit dispersal were deduced by analysis of functional traits associated with this process. Seedbank ecology was investigated by monitoring emergence of germinants from sawgrass soil samples held under varying water depths to determine the fate of dispersed seeds. Fine-scale study of sawgrass fruits yielded information on contributions to variation in sexually produced propagules in this species, which primarily reproduces vegetatively. It was hypothesized that Everglades plants possess a set of functional traits that enhance diaspore dispersal. To test this, 14 traits were evaluated among 51 species by factor analysis. The factorial plot of this analysis generated groups of related traits, with four suites of traits forming dispersal syndromes. Hydrochory traits were categorized by buoyancy and appendages enhancing buoyancy. Anemochory traits were categorized by diaspore size and appendages enhancing air movement. Epizoochory traits were categorized by diaspore size, buoyancy, and appendages allowing for attachment. Endozoochory traits were categorized by diaspore size, buoyancy, and appendages aiding diaspore presentation. These patterns/trends of functional trait organization also represent dispersal community assembly rules. Seeds dispersed by hydrochory were hypothesized to be caught most often in the edge of the north side of sawgrass patches. Patterns of germination and dispersal mode of all hydrochorous macrophytes with propagules in the seedbank were elucidated by germination analysis from 90 soil samples collected from 10 sawgrass patches. Mean site seed density was 486 seeds/m2 from 13 species. Most seeds collected at the north side of patches and significantly in the outer one meter of the patch edge (p = 0.013). Sawgrass seed germination was hypothesized to vary by site, among individual plants, and within different locations of a plant’s infructescence. An analysis of sawgrass fruits with nested ANOVAs found that collection site and interaction of site x individual plant significantly affect germination ability, seed viability, and fruit size (p < 0.050). Fruit location within a plant’s infructescence did not significantly affect germination. As for allocation of resources to sexual reproduction, only 17.9% of sawgrass seeds germinated and only 4.8% of ungerminated seeds with fleshy endosperm were presumed viable, but dormant. Collectively, only 22% of all sawgrass seeds produced were viable.