4.7 Article

Niche use and co-occurrence patterns of zooplankton along a strong urbanization gradient

期刊

ECOGRAPHY
卷 2022, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ecog.05513

关键词

co-occurrence; niche; niche overlap; spatial statistics; urbanization; zooplankton

资金

  1. Belspo IAP project SPEEDY [P7/04]
  2. IWT PhD fellowship
  3. KU Leuven [C16/2017/002]
  4. FWO [FWO G0B9818]
  5. Richard Lounsbery Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates niche use and co-occurrence patterns along an urbanization gradient. The results show that most species have conserved niche positions from rural to urban areas, but the niches of species occurring in both areas are partly unfilled in urban populations. Niche overlap is an important predictor of species co-occurrence. Urbanization has damaging effects on biodiversity, benefiting generalist species and making it difficult for species to occupy available niche space.
Community composition in a given landscape is a complex product of the constituent species' niche requirements, geographic connectivity, environmental properties, species interactions and drift. In this study, we examined niche use of 16 cladoceran species in 81 zooplankton communities that inhabit environmentally variable sites along a strong urbanization gradient. We tested to what extent niche shifts occurred along the urbanization gradient. We also quantified to what extent niche overlap can explain co-occurrence patterns and tested whether alternative processes such as dispersal limitation or environmental heterogeneity impact co-occurrence patterns. Niche use in the study region was size-mediated, with larger species preferring nutrient-rich environments while smaller species were more specialized on distinct niche axes. Our analyses also revealed that mainly generalist species were able to establish in urban sites. While the average niche position for most species was conserved from rural to urban sites, the niches of those species occurring in both rural and urban areas remain partly unfilled in the urban populations. We observed that a relatively small proportion (13%) of species pairs co-occurred more or less often than expected by chance, but also that niche overlap was the only predictor that was strongly and significantly associated with co-occurrence scores in our study. While most of these species pairs showed evidence for a role of environmental filtering, a few common, generalist species pairs displayed segregated co-occurrence patterns and high niche overlap, suggesting a role of limiting similarity relationships as well. Our study highlights the damaging effects on biodiversity of urbanization through biotic homogenization benefitting generalist species, as well as the difficulty species may face in occupying available niche space in urbanized habitats.

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