Scale-dependent effects of marine subsidies on the island biogeographic patterns of plants
Obrist, Debora S.; Fitzpatrick, Owen T.; Brown, Norah E.M.; Hanly, Patrick J.; Nijland, Wiebe; Reshitnyk, Luba Y.; Wickham, Sara B.; Darimont, Chris T.; Reynolds, John D.; Starzomski, Brian M.
(2022) Ecology and Evolution, volume 12, issue 9, pp. 1 - 20
(Article)
Abstract
Although species richness can be determined by different mechanisms at different spatial scales, the role of scale in the effects of marine inputs on island biogeography has not been studied explicitly. Here, we evaluated the potential influence of island characteristics and marine inputs (seaweed wrack biomass and marine-derived nitrogen in
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the soil) on plant species richness at both a local (plot) and regional (island) scale on 92 islands in British Columbia, Canada. We found that the effects of subsidies on species richness depend strongly on spatial scale. Despite detecting no effects of marine subsidies at the island scale, we found that as plot level subsidies increased, species richness decreased; plots with more marine-derived nitrogen in the soil hosted fewer plant species. We found no effect of seaweed wrack at either scale. To identify potential mechanisms underlying the decrease in diversity, we fit a spatially explicit joint species distribution model to evaluate species level responses to marine subsidies and effects of biotic interactions among species. We found mixed evidence for competition for both light and nutrients, and cannot rule out an alternative mechanism; the observed decrease in species richness may be due to disturbances associated with animal-mediated nutrient deposits, particularly those from North American river otters (Lontra canadensis). By evaluating the scale-dependent effects of marine subsidies on island biogeographic patterns of plants and revealing likely mechanisms that act on community composition, we provide novel insights on the scale dependence of a fundamental ecological theory, and on the rarely examined links between marine and terrestrial ecosystems often bridged by animal vectors.
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Keywords: biodiversity, island biogeography, marine-derived nutrients, plant ecology, spatial scale, spatial subsidies, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, Ecology, Nature and Landscape Conservation
ISSN: 2045-7758
Publisher: Wiley
Note: Funding Information: This work was funded by the Tula Foundation, Mitacs, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Discovery Grants to CTD, JDR, and BMS, an NSERC CGS‐M and CGS‐D to DSO, and the Ian McTaggart Cowan Professorship at the University of Victoria to BMS. Funding Information: We thank Morgan Davies, Rebecca Miller, Kalina Hunter, and Carl Humchitt for field assistance, as well as the other members of the 100 Islands Project, the Earth to Oceans Research Group, and the Starzomski and Reynolds labs for statistical support and feedback throughout. We also thank the scientists and support staff at the Hakai Institute for extensive logistical support and collaboration. In addition, we are extremely grateful to the Haíɫzaqv and Wuikinuxv First Nations for their support of this research. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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