Do large‐scale associations in birds imply biotic interactions or environmental filtering?
Elo, M., Kajanus, M. H., Tolvanen, J., Devictor, V., Forsman, J. T., Lehikoinen, A., Mönkkönen, M., Thorson, J. T., Vollstädt, M. G. R., & Kivelä, S. M. (2023). Do large‐scale associations in birds imply biotic interactions or environmental filtering?. Journal of Biogeography, 50(1), 169-182. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14520
Published in
Journal of BiogeographyAuthors
Date
2023Discipline
ResurssiviisausyhteisöEkologia ja evoluutiobiologiaSchool of Resource WisdomEcology and Evolutionary BiologyCopyright
© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Biogeography published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Aim
There has been a wide interest in the effect of biotic interactions on species' occurrences and abundances at large spatial scales, coupled with a vast development of the statistical methods to study them. Still, evidence for whether the effects of within-trophic-level biotic interactions (e.g. competition and heterospecific attraction) are discernible beyond local scales remains inconsistent. Here, we present a novel hypothesis-testing framework based on joint dynamic species distribution models and functional trait similarity to dissect between environmental filtering and biotic interactions.
Location
France and Finland.
Taxon
Birds.
Methods
We estimated species-to-species associations within a trophic level, independent of the main environmental variables (mean temperature and total precipitation) for common species at large spatial scale with joint dynamic species distribution (a multivariate spatiotemporal delta model) models. We created hypotheses based on species' functionality (morphological and/or diet dissimilarity) and habitat preferences about the sign and strength of the pairwise spatiotemporal associations to estimate the extent to which they result from biotic interactions (competition, heterospecific attraction) and/or environmental filtering.
Results
Spatiotemporal associations were mostly positive (80%), followed by random (15%), and only 5% were negative. Where detected, negative spatiotemporal associations in different communities were due to a few species. The relationship between spatiotemporal association and functional dissimilarity among species was negative, which fulfils the predictions of both environmental filtering and heterospecific attraction.
Main conclusions
We showed that processes leading to species aggregation (mixture between environmental filtering and heterospecific attraction) seem to dominate assembly rules, and we did not find evidence for competition. Altogether, our hypothesis-testing framework based on joint dynamic species distribution models and functional trait similarity is beneficial in ecological interpretation of species-to-species associations from data covering several decades and biogeographical regions.
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Publisher
WileyISSN Search the Publication Forum
0305-0270Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/160136485
Metadata
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Additional information about funding
This study was funded by Kone Foundation (M. Elo, J.T. Forsman), Kvantum Institute at University of Oulu (J.T. Forsman, M.H. Kajanus, J. Tolvanen), Unit of Ecology and Genetics at University of Oulu (M.H. Kajanus), North Ostrobothnia Regional Fund at the Finnish Cultural Foundation (M.H. Kajanus), Emil Aaltonen Foundation (S.M. Kivelä) and Academy of Finland (S.M. Kivelä: #314833 & #319898; A. Lehikoinen #323527). ...License
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