93rd ESA Annual Meeting (August 3 -- August 8, 2008)

COS 36-5 - An experimental test of source-sink dynamics in a multitrophic metacommunity

Tuesday, August 5, 2008: 2:50 PM
103 DE, Midwest Airlines Center
Sarah C. Lee, Department of Marine Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, Zachary T. Long, Department of Biology and Marine Biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, NC, Jennifer Adams Krumins, Department of Biology and Molecular Biology, Montclair State University, Montclair, NJ and Peter J. Morin, Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
Background/Question/Methods

Source-sink effects occur where environmental heterogeneity at the regional scale allows a species to persist in unfavorable habitats because of immigration from favorable habitats. Theoretical evidence suggests that community structure and species coexistence in source-sink metacommunities is strongly determined by the proportion of dispersal between localities. However, in many experimental tests it is difficult to parse the effects of source-sink dynamics from trade-offs between competitive and dispersal abilities. Although these two mechanisms likely work in concert in natural communities, competitive-colonization dynamics arise from a particular distribution of species traits within an interacting community whereas source-sink effects can result from purely random dispersal in a heterogeneous environment. We used a model microbial system to examine how the source sink dynamics affect specific aspects of community structure: coexistence at the local and metacommunity level over time, relative abundance of species, and spatial and temporal variation in population sizes. We directly manipulated the proportion of dispersal in a multi-trophic metacommunity consisting of bacteria, bacterivores, and omnivore/predators. Regional heterogeneity was introduced via temperature differences between local communities.
Results/Conclusions

We found that local (alpha) species richness reached a maximum when 50% of the community dispersed and that between-community (beta) richness decreased with increasing dispersal due to increased homogenization. Relative abundance distributions varied with the level of dispersal. As predicted by source-sink metacommunity models, these patterns appear to be driven by a shift in dominance from a strong local competitor to a strong regional competitor as dispersal increases. Overall, dispersal had a stabilizing effect on species richness; temporal variation in local communities and spatial variation within metacommunities were greatest in the absence of dispersal. These results suggest that even relatively weak dispersal (1% of total community) can change the outcome of local interactions and that these effects are not dependent on species’ variation in dispersal ability.