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Environmental control of the microfaunal community structure in tropical bromeliads
Authors:Pavel Kratina  Jana S Petermann  Nicholas A C Marino  Andrew A M MacDonald  Diane S Srivastava
Institution:1. School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK;2. Biodiversity Research Centre and Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada;3. Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria;4. Programa de Pós‐Gradua??o em Ecologia, Departmento de Ecologia, Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
Abstract:Ecological communities hosted within phytotelmata (plant compartments filled with water) provide an excellent opportunity to test ecological theory and to advance our understanding of how local and global environmental changes affect ecosystems. However, insights from bromeliad phytotelmata communities are currently limited by scarce accounts of microfauna assemblages, even though these assemblages are critical in transferring, recycling, and releasing nutrients in these model ecosystems. Here, we analyzed natural microfaunal communities in leaf compartments of 43 bromeliads to identify the key environmental filters underlying their community structures. We found that microfaunal community richness and abundance were negatively related to canopy openness and vertical height above the ground. These associations were primarily driven by the composition of amoebae and flagellate assemblages and indicate the importance of bottom‐up control of microfauna in bromeliads. Taxonomic richness of all functional groups followed a unimodal relationship with water temperature, peaking at 23–25°C and declining below and above this relatively narrow thermal range. This suggests that relatively small changes in water temperature under expected future climate warming may alter taxonomic richness and ecological structure of these communities. Our findings improve the understanding of this unstudied but crucial component of bromeliad ecosystems and reveal important environmental filters that likely contribute to overall bromeliad community structure and function.
Keywords:aquatic microfauna  community structure  environmental sorting  natural microcosms  protozoans  taxonomic richness  tropical bromeliads
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