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The biogeography of community assembly: latitude and predation drive variation in community trait distribution in a guild of epifaunal crustaceans

Cite this dataset

Gross, Collin et al. (2022). The biogeography of community assembly: latitude and predation drive variation in community trait distribution in a guild of epifaunal crustaceans [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.25338/B83627

Abstract

While considerable evidence exists of biogeographic patterns in the intensity of species interactions, the influence of these patterns on variation in community structure is less clear. Using a model selection approach on measures of trait dispersion in crustaceans associated with eelgrass (Zostera marina) spanning 30º of latitude in two oceans, we found that dispersion strongly increased with increasing predation and decreasing latitude. Ocean and epiphyte load appeared as secondary predictors; Pacific communities were more overdispersed while Atlantic communities were more clustered, and increasing epiphytes were associated with increased clustering. By examining how species interactions and environmental filters influence community structure across biogeographic regions, we demonstrate how both latitudinal variation in species interactions and historical contingency shape these responses. Community trait distributions have implications for ecosystem stability and functioning, and integrating large-scale observations of environmental filters, species interactions, and traits can help us predict how communities may respond to environmental change.

Methods

See main manuscript for details. 

Funding

National Science Foundation, Award: OCE 1336206, OCE 1336905, OCE 1336741

Åbo Akedemi University Foundation