4.5 Article

Connecting landscape structure and patterns in body size distributions

Journal

OIKOS
Volume 121, Issue 5, Pages 697-710

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2011.19548.x

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Funding

  1. FONDAP-FONDECYT [1501-0001]
  2. ICM [P05-002]
  3. Programa de Financiamiento Basal de Conicyt [PFB-23]
  4. CONICYT [AT24081010]
  5. [FCE 2007-054]

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Understanding the interaction between community structure and landscape structure represents a pressing theoretical challenge of great applied importance considering the increasing structural modification of ecosystems through habitat loss and fragmentation. Dispersal ability and energetic demands coupled to body size determine the landscape structure experienced by an organism, which could essentially be fragmented for small individuals but continuous for large ones. Although discontinuities in species assemblages have been predicted and detected, no explicit association between habitat structure and body size distributions has been demonstrated. In this contribution, we propose that body size structure in local communities should reflect such different perceptions of landscape structure. To this end, we explore this association in a simple metacommunity located in the Atacama Desert, in northern Chile. Using graph theory we found that species of different size and trophic position (carnivores and herbivores) perceive the landscape at contrasting spatial scales. In each community (n = 31) we determined the observed and the expected body size distributions in a random sample from the metacommunity of 18 727 individuals , which allowed us to identify the body sizes at which an overrepresentation or underrepresentation of individuals occur. Such aggregations and discontinuities in body sizes were related, for carnivores, to patch location within the landscape, and to the internal banded vegetation pattern within patches for herbivores. Our study shows, for the first time, an empirical connection between the spatial distribution of communities, their local attributes, and the existence and locations of discontinuities and aggregations in body size distributions.

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