4.8 Article

Joint species distributions reveal the combined effects of host plants, abiotic factors and species competition as drivers of species abundances in fruit flies

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 24, Issue 9, Pages 1905-1916

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.13825

Keywords

community ecology; niche modelling; performance; phytophagous insects; preference; specialisation

Categories

Funding

  1. French 'Agence Nationale de la Recherche' [ANR-10-EQPX-20, ANR-17-CE32-011]
  2. French Ministry of Agriculture
  3. European Union (European Regional Development Fund, ERDF) [I2016-1731-0006632]
  4. Conseil Regional de La Reunion
  5. Centre de Cooperation Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Developpement (CIRAD)
  6. Ministere de l'Enseignement superieur et de la Recherche Scientifique de la Tunisie

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The relative importance of ecological factors and species interactions for shaping species distributions is still debated. Species abundances depended on host plants, followed by climatic factors, with a dose of competition between species sharing host plants. The relative importance of these factors mildly changed among the three host plant groups.
The relative importance of ecological factors and species interactions for shaping species distributions is still debated. The realised niches of eight sympatric tephritid fruit flies were inferred from field abundance data using joint species distribution modelling and network inference, on the whole community and separately on three host plant groups. These estimates were then confronted the fundamental niches of seven fly species estimated through laboratory-measured fitnesses on host plants. Species abundances depended on host plants, followed by climatic factors, with a dose of competition between species sharing host plants. The relative importance of these factors mildly changed among the three host plant groups. Despite overlapping fundamental niches, specialists and generalists had almost distinct realised niches, with possible competitive exclusion of generalists by specialists on Cucurbitaceae. They had different assembly rules: Specialists were mainly influenced by their adaptation to host plants, while generalist abundances varied regardless of their fundamental host use.

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