Community form, function and phylogenetic diversity respond differently across microhabitat and recovery gradients
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-1-2023
Abstract
Research Highlight: Hoenle, P. O., Staab, M., Donoso, D. A., Argoti, A., & Blüthgen, N. (2023). Stratification and recovery time jointly shape ant functional reassembly in a neotropical forest. Journal of Animal Ecology, https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13896. Space, time and abiotic variation are primary axes across investigations of community ecology and disturbed ecosystems offer tractable systems for assessing their relative impact. While recovering forests can act as isolated case studies in understanding community assembly, it is not well understood how individual microhabitats respond to recovery and ultimately shape community attributes. Hoenle et al. (2023) leverage the ubiquity and microhabitat-specific diversity of ants across a gradient from active agricultural sites to old-growth forest and assess how recovery and stratification together shape communities. The authors find distinct stratification across phylogenetic, functional and trait diversity as forest recovery time increases, while also recovering unique recovery trajectories contingent on trait sampling. While stratified, phylogenetic and functional diversity did not increase along this recovery gradient. Ten out of 13 sampled traits were jointly influenced by both stratification and recovery time. In contrast to intuitive predictions, a majority of trait means converged throughout the recovery period. Results highlight the multifaceted nature of recovery-based community assembly and the capacity of multidimensional sampling to uncover surprising patterns in ecologically diverse lineages.
Identifier
85164244268 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Journal of Animal Ecology
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13934
e-ISSN
13652656
ISSN
00218790
PubMed ID
37403332
First Page
1290
Last Page
1293
Issue
7
Volume
92
Grant
DEB 2144915
Fund Ref
National Science Foundation
Recommended Citation
Barden, Phillip, "Community form, function and phylogenetic diversity respond differently across microhabitat and recovery gradients" (2023). Faculty Publications. 1592.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/1592
