4.7 Article

Semi-quantitative metabarcoding reveals how climate shapes arthropod community assembly along elevation gradients on Hawaii Island

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 5, Pages 1416-1429

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16323

Keywords

arthropod communities; beta diversity; elevational gradients; genetic differentiation

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB 1241253]

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The study investigates arthropod community-level diversity patterns along elevational transects on two different volcanoes of Hawai'i, finding that arthropod communities become increasingly distinct compositionally at higher elevations between the two transects. The results suggest that climatic differences play a crucial role in shaping beta-diversity patterns, with varying importance across taxonomic groups. Additionally, the correlation of climatic niche position between transects indicates that climatic filters influence colonization between adjacent volcanoes.
Spatial variation in climatic conditions along elevation gradients provides an important backdrop by which communities assemble and diversify. Lowland habitats tend to be connected through time, whereas highlands can be continuously or periodically isolated, conditions that have been hypothesized to promote high levels of species endemism. This tendency is expected to be accentuated among taxa that show niche conservatism within a given climatic envelope. While species distribution modeling approaches have allowed extensive exploration of niche conservatism among target taxa, a broad understanding of the phenomenon requires sampling of entire communities. Species-rich groups such as arthropods are ideal case studies for understanding ecological and biodiversity dynamics along elevational gradients given their important functional role in many ecosystems, but community-level studies have been limited due to their tremendous diversity. Here, we develop a novel semi-quantitative metabarcoding approach that combines specimen counts and size-sorting to characterize arthropod community-level diversity patterns along elevational transects on two different volcanoes of the island of Hawai'i. We found that arthropod communities between the two transects became increasingly distinct compositionally at higher elevations. Resistance surface approaches suggest that climatic differences between sampling localities are an important driver in shaping beta-diversity patterns, though the relative importance of climate varies across taxonomic groups. Nevertheless, the climatic niche position of OTUs between transects was highly correlated, suggesting that climatic filters shape the colonization between adjacent volcanoes. Taken together, our results highlight climatic niche conservatism as an important factor shaping ecological assembly along elevational gradients and suggest topographic complexity as an important driver of diversification.

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