Assemblage structure: an overlooked component of human-mediated species movements among freshwater ecosystems

Submitted: 28 May 2013
Accepted: 2 October 2013
Published: 8 April 2014
Abstract Views: 2790
PDF: 773
Publisher's note
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

Authors

The spread and impact of alien species among freshwater ecosystems has increased with global trade and human movement; therefore, quantifying the role of anthropogenic and ecological factors that increase the risk of invasion is an important conservation goal. Two factors considered as null models when assessing the potential for invasion are colonization pressure (i.e., the number of species introduced) and propagule pressure [i.e., the number (propagule size), and frequency (propagule number), of individuals of each species introduced]. We translate the terminology of species abundance distributions to the invasion terminology of propagule size and colonization size (PS and CS, respectively). We conduct hypothesis testing to determine the underlying statistical species abundance distribution for zooplankton assemblages transported between freshwater ecosystems; and, on the basis of a lognormal distribution, construct four hypothetical assemblages spanning assemblage structure, rank-abundance gradient (e.g., even vs uneven), total abundance (of all species combined), and relative contribution of PS vs CS. For a given CS, many combinations of PS and total abundance can occur when transported assemblages conform to a lognormal species abundance distribution; therefore, for a given transportation event, many combinations of CS and PS are possible with potentially different ecological outcomes. An assemblage exhibiting high PS but low CS (species poor, but highly abundant) may overcome demographic barriers to establishment, but with lower certainty of amenable environmental conditions in the recipient region; whereas, the opposite extreme, high CS and low PS (species rich, but low abundance per species) may provide multiple opportunities for one of n arriving species to circumvent environmental barriers, albeit with lower potential to overcome demographic constraints. Species abundance distributions and the corresponding influence of CS and PS are some of many influential factors (e.g., demographic and genetic stochasticity, environmental variability, composition of recipient ecosystems) that will help refine an understanding of establishment risk following the human-mediated movement of species. 

Dimensions

Altmetric

PlumX Metrics

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Citations

Supporting Agencies

financial support from the CNR (Italy) for a short-term mobility grant to HJM, NSERC Discovery grants to HJM and SAB, NSERC scholarship to FC, and NSERC Visiting Fellow Stipends to DARD and EB from Transport Canada and Fisheries and Oceans Canada.
Farrah T. Chan, University of Windsor
Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research
Hugh J. MacIsaac, University of Windsor

NSERC Canadian Aquatic Invasive Species Network II, Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research

How to Cite

Drake, D. Andrew R., Farrah T. Chan, Elizabeta Briski, Sarah A. Bailey, and Hugh J. MacIsaac. 2014. “Assemblage Structure: An Overlooked Component of Human-Mediated Species Movements Among Freshwater Ecosystems”. Journal of Limnology 73 (s1). https://doi.org/10.4081/jlimnol.2014.802.

Similar Articles

<< < 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

List of Cited By :

Crossref logo