4.5 Article

Relative contribution of neutral and deterministic processes in shaping fruit-feeding butterfly assemblages in Afrotropical forests

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 296-308

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.3618

Keywords

Africa; biodiversity; canopy; dispersal; neutral theory; species abundance

Funding

  1. UNESCO-MAB
  2. African Forest Research Network (AFORNET)
  3. Tropical Biology Association (TBA)
  4. KNUST staff development program
  5. US National Science Foundation [DEB-1541557]
  6. VIDI from NWO-ALW
  7. Government of India (INSPIRE)
  8. Region Bretagne
  9. Estonian Science Foundation [9215, IUT20-33]
  10. European Union through the European Regional Development Fund (Centre of Excellence FIBIR)
  11. WOTRO [W80-82-238]
  12. Division Of Environmental Biology
  13. Direct For Biological Sciences [1541557] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The unified neutral theory of biodiversity and biogeography has gained the status of a quantitative null model for explaining patterns in ecological (meta)communities. The theory assumes that individuals of trophically similar species are functionally equivalent. We empirically evaluate the relative contribution of neutral and deterministic processes in shaping fruit-feeding butterfly assemblages in three tropical forests in Africa, using both direct (confronting the neutral model with species abundance data) and indirect approaches (testing the predictions of neutral theory using data other than species abundance distributions). Abundance data were obtained by sampling butterflies using banana baited traps set at the forest canopy and understorey strata. Our results indicate a clear consistency in the kind of species or species groups observed at either the canopy or understorey in the three studied communities. Furthermore, we found significant correlation between some flight-related morphological traits and species abundance at the forest canopy, but not at the understorey. Neutral theory's contribution to explaining our data lies largely in identifying dispersal limitation as a key process regulating fruit-feeding butterfly community structure. Our study illustrates that using species abundance data alone in evaluating neutral theory can be informative, but is insufficient. Species-level information such as habitat preference, host plants, geographical distribution, and phylogeny is essential in elucidating the processes that regulate biodiversity community structures and patterns.

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