4.6 Article

Relationships between distribution and abundance vary with spatial scale and ecological group in stream bryophytes

Journal

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue 10, Pages 1879-1889

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2006.01624.x

Keywords

bryophytes; distribution patterns; interspecific distribution-abundance relationship; streams

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1. We examined whether the local abundance of stream bryophytes in a boreal drainage basin (Koutajoki system in northeastern Finland) correlated with their: (i) regional occupancy; (ii) provincial distribution in northwestern Europe; and (iii) global range size. We specifically tested whether aquatic and semi-aquatic species differ in their distribution-abundance relationships. We also analysed the frequency distributions of occupancy at two spatial scales: within the focal drainage system and across provinces of northwestern Europe. 2. Regional occupancy and mean local abundance of stream bryophytes were positively correlated, and the relationship was rather strong in aquatic species but very weak in semi-aquatic species. Local abundance was related neither to provincial distribution nor global distribution. 3. Species frequency distributions differed between regional occupancy and provincial distribution. While most species were rare with regard to their regional occupancy within the focal drainage system, most of the same set of species were common and occurred in most provinces in northwestern Europe. 4. The results indicate the presence of dominants (core species) and transients/subordinates (satellite species) among stream bryophytes, highlighting marked differentiation in life-history strategies and growth form. The observed abundance-occupancy relationships suggest that dispersal limitation and metapopulation processes may govern the dynamics of obligatory aquatic stream bryophytes. In semi-aquatic species, however, habitat availability may be more important in contributing to regional occupancy.

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