Nested subset structure of larval mycophagous fly assemblages: Nestedness in a non-island system

被引:37
作者
Worthen, WB
Carswell, ML
Kelly, KA
机构
[1] Biology Department, Furman University, Greenville
关键词
nested subsets; Drosophila; community structure; species-area relationships;
D O I
10.1007/BF00327910
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Nested subset structure has been studied in archipelagoes and fragmented habitats, and has been attributed to differential colonization and extinction rates among species and nested environmental tolerances. In this experiment, we tested for nestedness in assemblages of mycophagous fly larvae. Twenty mushrooms in each of three size classes (4.8-6.0 g, 10-15 g, 21-32 g) were placed on moist potting soil in experimental cups. The cups were placed in oak and pine forests in Greenville, S.C., USA for 5 days, where they were available to ovipositing flies. Upon collection, the mushrooms were incubated in the laboratory for 3 weeks and all emerging flies were sorted by species, counted, and weighed. A random placement analysis was conducted to determine whether the species richness pattern was a sampling artifact of the species abundance distributions. The actual species richness pattern did not conform to the random placement model; most mushrooms contained significantly fewer species than predicted by random sampling. The communities were strongly nested as measured by two different indices, and the nestedness pattern was related to mushroom size. Small mushrooms usually produced no flies or a single species, Dohrniphora sp. (Phoridae). Medium and large mushrooms typically produced more species-rich communities that usually contained the phorid and Drosophila putrida, D. tripunctata, and Leucophenga varia. This core guild was nested within a more diverse assemblage that included D. falleni, Mycodrosophila dimidiata, a muscid, and two Leptocera sp. (Sphaeroceridae). These patterns are tentatively explained in the context of nested desiccation tolerances, mediated by differences in mushroom size.
引用
收藏
页码:257 / 264
页数:8
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1981, Statistical Tables
[2]  
[Anonymous], [No title captured]
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2007, Biostatistical analysis
[4]  
Beeby A., 1993, Applying ecology
[5]  
BEGON M, 1990, ECOLOGY
[6]   NESTED SUBSETS AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF BIRDS ON ISOLATED WOODLOTS [J].
BLAKE, JG .
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 1991, 5 (01) :58-66
[7]   ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHIC THEORY AND CONSERVATION PRACTICE - SPECIES-AREA OR SPECIOUS-AREA RELATIONSHIPS [J].
BOECKLEN, WJ ;
GOTELLI, NJ .
BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 1984, 29 (01) :63-80
[8]   OCCURRENCE PATTERNS OF BIRD SPECIES IN HABITAT FRAGMENTS - SAMPLING, EXTINCTION, AND NESTED SPECIES SUBSETS [J].
BOLGER, DT ;
ALBERTS, AC ;
SOULE, ME .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1991, 137 (02) :155-166
[9]  
BROWN JH, 1981, AM ZOOL, V21, P877
[10]   SPECIES DIVERSITY OF SEED EATING DESERT RODENTS IN SAND DUNE HABITATS [J].
BROWN, JH .
ECOLOGY, 1973, 54 (04) :775-787