4.5 Article

Phylogenetic diversity and community assembly in a naturally fragmented system

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 24, Pages 18066-18080

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8404

Keywords

biodiversity; community ecology; insular communities; phylogenetics; traits; vascular plants

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [P30 GM10332]
  2. University of Idaho Stillinger Trust
  3. University of Idaho Graduate Professional Student Association

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The study evaluated the effects of fragmentation on community assembly in Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve. Through traditional metrics and machine-learning models, it was found that neutral and filtering processes influenced the formation of plant communities in the fragmented system. Different kipukas exhibited varying ecological characteristics, with model support for competition decreasing as species richness increased and habitat filtering being more prominent in lower elevation kipukas.
We sought to assess effects of fragmentation and quantify the contribution of ecological processes to community assembly by measuring species richness, phylogenetic, and phenotypic diversity of species found in local and regional plant communities. Specifically, our fragmented system is Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve, Idaho, USA. CRMO is characterized by vegetated islands, kipukas, that are isolated in a matrix of lava. We used floristic surveys of vascular plants in 19 kipukas to create a local species list to compare traditional dispersion metrics, mean pairwise distance, and mean nearest taxon distance (MPD and MNTD), to a regional species list with phenotypic and phylogenetic data. We combined phylogenetic and functional trait data in a novel machine-learning model selection approach, Community Assembly Model Inference (CAMI), to infer probability associated with different models of community assembly given the data. Finally, we used linear regression to explore whether the geography of kipukas explained estimated support for community assembly models. Using traditional metrics of MPD and MNTD neutral processes received the most support when comparing kipuka species to regional species. Individually no kipukas showed significant support for overdispersion. Rather, five kipukas showed significant support for phylogenetic clustering using MPD and two kipukas using MNTD. Using CAMI, we inferred neutral and filtering models structured the kipuka plant community for our trait of interest. Finally, we found as species richness in kipukas increases, model support for competition decreases and lower elevation kipukas show more support for habitat filtering models. While traditional phylogenetic community approaches suggest neutral assembly dynamics, recently developed approaches utilizing machine learning and model choice revealed joint influences of assembly processes to form the kipuka plant communities. Understanding ecological processes at play in naturally fragmented systems will aid in guiding our understanding of how fragmentation impacts future changes in landscapes.

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