Title
Directional changes over time in the species composition of tropical vascular epiphyte assemblages
Date Issued
01 March 2022
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg
Publisher(s)
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Abstract
Understanding the degree to which deterministic and stochastic processes drive community assembly is an ongoing focus of research in community ecology. This effort is strongly biased towards ground-rooted plants, resulting in a limited understanding of communities of other life-forms, such as structurally dependent plants. Vascular epiphytes are sessile organisms growing non-parasitically on three-dimensional dynamic patches, their host plants. Since negative biotic interactions are thought to play a minor role in vascular epiphyte assembly, in some forests, epiphytes are fascinating model organisms to understand the prevalence of environmental filtering in shaping community assembly. We assessed the contribution of deterministic processes on the temporal dynamics of vascular epiphyte assemblages by tracking the direction of changes in composition, species richness and abundance in time at different ecological and spatial scales. We made use of a globally unique dataset from a lowland forest in Panama. We predict that if niche-based mechanisms dominate, (a) temporal changes will be directional and (b) differences in the species composition of epiphyte assemblages will be primarily related to host plant characteristics and, to a lesser degree, to the distance between host trees. We show that temporal changes in vascular epiphyte assemblages were directional at different ecological scales, such as the forest patch, host species or individual tree assemblages. Epiphyte assemblages on host trees became more similar in their composition over time than expected by chance, and these changes were not due to homogenisation. While host characteristics were related to these directional changes, host structure rather than host identity was more strongly related to variation in assemblage dissimilarity, while spatial distance among trees was of minor importance. The observed directionality was primarily due to environmental filtering. This study provides the first evidence that niche-based mechanisms dominate the dynamics of vascular epiphyte assemblages. Analysing temporal patterns of vascular epiphyte assemblages is a first important step towards understanding the relative importance of deterministic processes for diversity maintenance of one of the most diverse plant groups in the tropics. Synthesis. Directionality in the temporal changes of epiphyte assemblages suggests that niche-based mechanisms dominate these temporal changes. Host size over host identity is the most important environmental filter for epiphyte assemblages establishment.
Start page
553
End page
568
Volume
110
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Conservación de la Biodiversidad
Ecología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85121352558
Source
Journal of Ecology
ISSN of the container
00220477
Sponsor(s)
We are grateful to the government of Panama and ANAM for providing research permits. Thanks as well to the team of the canopy crane program at STRI, who provided valuable and continuous logistic help and to the CTFS‐Tree Censuses and Inventories in Panama who provided tree census data. Funding was provided by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG ZO 94/5‐1) and STRI, Panama. We thank Stefan Wester, Steffen Schultz, Katrin Wagner and Birgit Vollrath, who participated in data collection. We also thank Peter Hietz, Klaus Mehltreter and Amanda Taylor for their valuable comments in the review process and Lou Jost, Mathias Tobler and Charles Zartman for comments on a previous manuscript version. Additional thanks to IDEAWILD.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus