BECAS
MANZO Luz Maria
artículos
Título:
Blowin’ in the wind: Wind directionality affects wetland invertebrate metacommunities in Patagonia
Autor/es:
EPELE, LUIS BELTRÁN; DOS SANTOS, DANIEL ANDRÉS; SARREMEJANE, ROMAIN; GRECH, MARTA GLADYS; MANZO, LUZ MARÍA; MACCHI, PABLO ANTONIO; MISERENDINO, MARÍA LAURA; BONADA, NÚRIA; CAÑEDO-ARGÜELLES, MIGUEL
Revista:
Global Ecology and Biogeography
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2021 p. 1 - 13
ISSN:
1466-822X
Resumen:
Aim: To assess the relative importance of wind intensity and direction in explainingwetland invertebrate metacommunity organization.Location: Seventy-eight wetland ponds in Patagonia (Argentina) covering a studyarea of 3.5 × 105 km2.Time period: Ponds were sampled once between 2006 and 2014.Major taxa studied: One hundred and fifty-eight taxa of wetland aquatic invertebrates.Methods: We generated two beta diversity matrices (based on flying and non-flyinginvertebrates) and six predictor matrices, including three environmental distance matrices, a topographic distance between ponds, and two wind pairwise matrices differing in wind speed. Using Moran spectral randomization of Mantel (MSR-Mantel) tests(which account for spatial autocorrelation), we assessed the relationship betweenthe response and the predictor matrices. We used a network-constrained version ofthe nestedness metric based on overlap and decreasing fill (NODF), to assess if windanisotropy (i.e., direction-dependent) affected community nestedness among ponds.Results: Flying dispersers? dissimilarity was significantly explained by environmental variables, whereas non-flying invertebrates? dissimilarity was not significantlyexplained by any of the distances tested. When wind direction was ignored, windspeed had a negligible effect on both types of communities, whereas when it wasconsidered a consistent nested pattern emerged, with the eastern ponds (downwind)communities being subsets of those from the western ponds (upwind).Main conclusions: We found that the invertebrate com- munities were mainly assembled by a combination of en- vironmental factors and wind directionality, although this depended on the dispersal ability of the organisms.