4.7 Article

Salmon nutrients are associated with the phylogenetic dispersion of riparian flowering-plant assemblages

期刊

ECOLOGY
卷 97, 期 2, 页码 450-460

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/15-0379.1

关键词

angiosperms; community assembly; flowering plants; marine nutrient subsidy; mean nearest taxon distance; Oncorhynchus; phylogenetic community structure; salmon

类别

资金

  1. Raincoast Conservation Foundation
  2. Tom Buell Endowment Fund at Simon Fraser University (SFU)
  3. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) postdoctoral fellowship
  4. NSERC Discovery and Accelerator grants
  5. Simon Fraser University
  6. B.C. Leading Edge Endowment Fund
  7. Pacific Salmon Foundation
  8. B.C. Pacific Salmon Forum
  9. Mountain Equipment Co-op

向作者/读者索取更多资源

A signature of nonrandom phylogenetic community structure has been interpreted as indicating community assembly processes. Significant clustering within the phylogenetic structure of a community can be caused by habitat filtering due to low nutrient availability. Nutrient limitation in temperate Pacific coastal rainforests can be alleviated to some extent by marine nutrient subsidies introduced by migrating salmon, which leave a quantitative signature on the makeup of plant communities near spawning streams. Thus, nutrient-mediated habitat filtering could be reduced by salmon nutrients. Here, we ask how salmon abundance affects the phylogenetic structure of riparian flowering plant assemblages across 50 watersheds in the Great Bear Rainforest of British Columbia, Canada. Based on a regional pool of 60 plant species, we found that assemblages become more phylogenetically dispersed and species poor adjacent to streams with higher salmon spawning density. In contrast, increased phylogenetic clumping and species richness was seen in sites with low salmon density, with steeper slopes, further from the stream edge, and within smaller watersheds. These observations are all consistent with abiotic habitat filtering and biotic competitive exclusion acting together across local and landscape-scale gradients in nutrient availability to structure assembly of riparian flowering plants. In this case, rich salmon nutrients appear to release riparian flowering-plant assemblages from the confines of a low-nutrient habitat filter that drives phylogenetic clustering.

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