| Keyword search (4,163 papers available) | ![]() |
"Freshwater" Keyword-tagged Publications:
| Title | Authors | PubMed ID | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Water Quality and Land Use Shape Bacterial Communities Across 621 Canadian Lakes | Onana VE; Beisner BE; Walsh DA; | 39868666 BIOLOGY |
| 2 | Spatial versus spatio-temporal approaches for studying metacommunities: a multi-taxon analysis in Mediterranean and tropical temporary ponds | Gálvez Á; Peres-Neto PR; Castillo-Escrivà A; Bonilla F; Camacho A; García-Roger EM; Iepure S; Miralles J; Monrós JS; Olmo C; Picazo A; Rojo C; Rueda J; Sasa M; Segura M; Armengol X; Mesquita-Joanes F; | 38565154 BIOLOGY |
| 3 | A resistome survey across hundreds of freshwater bacterial communities reveals the impacts of veterinary and human antibiotics use | Kraemer SA; Barbosa da Costa N; Oliva A; Huot Y; Walsh DA; | 36338036 BIOLOGY |
| 4 | Inconsistent response of taxonomic groups to space and environment in mediterranean and tropical pond metacommunities | Gálvez Á; Peres-Neto PR; Castillo-Escrivà A; Bonilla F; Camacho A; García-Roger EM; Iepure S; Miralles-Lorenzo J; Monrós JS; Olmo C; Picazo A; Rojo C; Rueda J; Sahuquillo M; Sasa M; Segura M; Armengol X; Mesquita-Joanes F; | 36199222 BIOLOGY |
| 5 | Comparing microscopy and DNA metabarcoding techniques for identifying cyanobacteria assemblages across hundreds of lakes | MacKeigan PW; Garner RE; Monchamp MÈ; Walsh DA; Onana VE; Kraemer SA; Pick FR; Beisner BE; Agbeti MD; da Costa NB; Shapiro BJ; Gregory-Eaves I; | 35287928 BIOLOGY |
| 6 | The occurrence of potentially pathogenic fungi and protists in Canadian lakes predicted using geomatics, in situ and satellite-derived variables: Towards a tele-epidemiological approach | Oliva A; Garner RE; Walsh D; Huot Y; | 34915335 BIOLOGY |
| 7 | The NSERC Canadian Lake Pulse Network: A national assessment of lake health providing science for water management in a changing climate. | Huot Y, Brown CA, Potvin G, Antoniades D, Baulch HM, Beisner BE, Bélanger S, Brazeau S, Cabana H, Cardille JA, Del Giorgio PA, Gregory-Eaves I, Fortin MJ, Lang AS, Laurion I, Maranger R, Prairie YT, Rusak JA, Segura PA, Siron R, Smol JP, Vinebrooke RD, Walsh DA | 31419692 BIOLOGY |
| Title: | Inconsistent response of taxonomic groups to space and environment in mediterranean and tropical pond metacommunities | ||||
| Authors: | Gálvez Á, Peres-Neto PR, Castillo-Escrivà A, Bonilla F, Camacho A, García-Roger EM, Iepure S, Miralles-Lorenzo J, Monrós JS, Olmo C, Picazo A, Rojo C, Rueda J, Sahuquillo M, Sasa M, Segura M, Armengol X, Mesquita-Joanes F | ||||
| Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36199222/ | ||||
| DOI: | 10.1002/ecy.3835 | ||||
| Publication: | Ecology | ||||
| Keywords: | dispersal limitation; environmental selection; freshwater metacommunity; multitaxon analysis; tropical and temperate ecology; | ||||
| PMID: | 36199222 | Category: | Date Added: | 2022-10-06 | |
| Dept Affiliation: |
BIOLOGY
1 Cavanilles Institute of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, University of València, Paterna, Spain. 2 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. 3 Instituto Clodomiro Picado, Facultad de Microbiología, Universidad de Costa Rica, San José, Costa Rica. 4 Emil Racovitza Institute of Speleology, Cluj Napoca, Romania. 5 Subdirecció General del Medi Natural, Generalitat Valenciana, València, Spain. 6 Museo de Zoología, Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Ecología Tropical, Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro, Costa Rica. |
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Description: |
The metacommunity concept provides a theoretical framework that aims at explaining organism distributions by a combination of environmental filtering, dispersal, and drift. However, few works have attempted a multitaxon approach and even fewer have compared two distant biogeographical regions using the same methodology. We tested the expectation that temperate (mediterranean-climate) pond metacommunities would be more influenced by environmental and spatial processes than tropical ones, because of stronger environmental gradients and a greater isolation of waterbodies. However, the pattern should be different among groups of organisms depending on their dispersal abilities. We surveyed 30 tropical and 32 mediterranean temporary ponds from Costa Rica and Spain, respectively, and obtained data on 49 environmental variables. We characterized the biological communities of bacteria and archaea (from the water column and the sediments), phytoplankton, zooplankton, benthic invertebrates, amphibians and birds, and estimated the relative role of space and environment on metacommunity organization for each group and region, by means of variation partitioning using generalized additive models. Purely environmental effects were important in both tropical and mediterranean ponds, but stronger in the latter, probably due to their larger limnological heterogeneity. Spatially correlated environment and pure spatial effects were greater in the tropics, related to higher climatic heterogeneity and dispersal processes (e.g., restriction, surplus) acting at different scales. The variability between taxonomic groups in the contribution of spatial and environmental factors to metacommunity variation was very wide, but higher in active, compared with passive, dispersers. Higher environmental effects were observed in mediterranean passive dispersers, and higher spatial effects in tropical passive dispersers. The unexplained variation was larger in the tropical setting, suggesting a higher role for stochastic processes, unmeasured environmental factors, or biotic interactions in the tropics, although this difference affected some actively dispersing groups (insects and birds) more than passive dispersers. These results, despite our limitations in comparing only two regions, provide support, for a wide variety of aquatic organisms, for the classic view of stronger abiotic niche constraints in temperate areas compared with the tropics. The heterogeneous response of taxonomic groups between regions also points to a stronger influence of regional context than organism adaptations on metacommunity organization. |



