6533b82cfe1ef96bd128e9dd

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The role of watercourse versus overland dispersal and niche effects on ostracod distribution in Mediterranean streams (eastern Iberian Peninsula)

Ramón HernándezAndreu Castillo-escrivàLaia ZamoraFrancesc Mesquita-joanesMónica Del MoralJuan Rueda

subject

0106 biological sciencesMetacommunityMediterranean climateEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologySpecies distributionNicheSpecies sortingSTREAMS010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesEnvironmental scienceBiological dispersalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationBiotic index

description

Abstract The processes behind the heterogeneous distribution of species involve a combination of environmental and spatial effects. In the spatial context, stream networks constitute appropriate systems to compare the relative importance of two dispersal modes in aquatic organisms: overland and watercourse dispersal. In the present study, we analyzed the distribution of ostracod species in a river network in the eastern Iberian Peninsula, with variation partitioning between environmental and spatial factors, using Moran and Asymmetric Eigenvector Maps (MEMs, AEMs) as spatial variables. Our aims were to determine the relative importance of environmental and spatial control and to compare the importance of overland and watercourse dispersal for species distribution of passively-dispersing aquatic organisms. Our results suggest that watercourse was the most important dispersal mode, favoring mass-effects. The role of species sorting was significant and related to temperature, stream width and water quality, measured as a biotic index (IBMWP). These results stress the major importance of connectivity, besides niche-related factors, in structuring riverine communities of passively-dispersing aquatic organisms.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actao.2016.02.001