29 research outputs found
High-quality habitat and facilitation ameliorate competitive effects of prior residents on new settlers
Many species disperse during their lifetime. Two factors that can affect the performance of individuals following dispersal are the presence of conspecifics and intrinsic habitat quality at the settlement site. Detecting the influence of these factors can be difficult for at least two reasons: (1) the outcomes of interactions with conspecifics are often variable including both competition and facilitation, and (2) selection of high quality habitats often leads to positive covariance between habitat quality and density. In this study, I investigate positive and negative effects of resident blue streak cleaner wrasse (Labroides dimidiatus) on the growth and survival of recently settled conspecifics while accounting for habitat quality. Juvenile L. dimidiatus settle near adult conspecifics, but likely have to compete with resident adults for access to food. However, field experiments indicate that settlers have access to more resources at occupied sites, and as a result, grow faster despite evidence for competition with residents. This result is a direct consequence of two factors: (1) resident conspecifics facilitate settlers by attracting client fish, and (2) resident conspecifics are strongly associated with high quality habitat. These results highlight the need to simultaneously consider habitat quality and competitive and facilitative interactions between conspecifics when making inferences about ecological processes from spatial patterns of individual performance
From wing to wing: the persistence of long ecological interaction chains in less-disturbed ecosystems
Human impact on biodiversity usually is measured by reduction in species abundance or richness. Just as important, but much more difficult to discern, is the anthropogenic elimination of ecological interactions. Here we report on the persistence of a long ecological interaction chain linking diverse food webs and habitats in the near-pristine portions of a remote Pacific atoll. Using biogeochemical assays, animal tracking, and field surveys we show that seabirds roosting on native trees fertilize soils, increasing coastal nutrients and the abundance of plankton, thus attracting manta rays to native forest coastlines. Partnered observations conducted in regions of this atoll where native trees have been replaced by human propagated palms reveal that this complex interaction chain linking trees to mantas readily breaks down. Taken together these findings provide a compelling example of how anthropogenic disturbance may be contributing to widespread reductions in ecological interaction chain length, thereby isolating and simplifying ecosystems
The Ecological Importance of Unregulated Tributaries to Macroinvertebrate Diversity and Community Composition in a Regulated River
In regulated rivers, dams alter longitudinal gradients in flow regimes, geomorphology, water quality and temperature with associated impacts on aquatic biota. Unregulated tributaries can increase biodiversity in regulated environments by contributing colonists to the main channel and creating transitional habitats at a stream junction. We assessed whether unregulated tributaries influence macroinvertebrate communities in two mainstem rivers during summer low-flows. Three tributary junctions of upland cobble-gravel bed streams were surveyed in an unregulated and a regulated river in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, California, USA. We found distinct physical habitat conditions and increased macroinvertebrate abundance and diversity in unregulated tributaries on the regulated river, but macroinvertebrate diversity did not increase downstream of tributary junctions as predicted. On the unregulated river, macroinvertebrate diversity was similar in upstream, downstream and unregulated tributary sites. Our findings highlight that unregulated tributaries support high macroinvertebrate diversity and heterogeneous communities compared to the mainstem sites in a regulated river, and thus likely support ecological processes, such as spillover predation, breeding and refugia use for mobile taxa. We suggest unregulated tributaries are an integral component of river networks, serving as valuable links in the landscape for enhancing biodiversity, and should be protected in conservation and management plans
The genetic and molecular architecture of phenotypic diversity in sticklebacks
A major goal of evolutionary biology is to identify the genotypes and phenotypes
that underlie adaptation to divergent environments. Stickleback
fish, including the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) and the
ninespine stickleback (Pungitius pungitius), have been at the forefront of
research to uncover the genetic and molecular architecture that underlies
phenotypic diversity and adaptation. A wealth of quantitative trait locus
(QTL) mapping studies in sticklebacks have provided insight into longstanding
questions about the distribution of effect sizes during adaptation
as well as the role of genetic linkage in facilitating adaptation. These QTL
mapping studies have also provided a basis for the identification of the
genes that underlie phenotypic diversity. These data have revealed that
mutations in regulatory elements play an important role in the evolution
of phenotypic diversity in sticklebacks. Genetic and molecular studies in
sticklebacks have also led to new insights on the genetic basis of repeated
evolution and suggest that the same loci are involved about half of the
time when the same phenotypes evolve independently. When the same
locus is involved, selection on standing variation and repeated mutation of
the same genes have both contributed to the evolution of similar phenotypes
in independent populations.
This article is part of the themed issue ‘Evo-devo in the genomics era,
and the origins of morphological diversity’