Increasing species richness along elevational gradients is associated with niche packing in bat assemblages

被引:7
|
作者
Chakravarty, Rohit [1 ,2 ]
Radchuk, Viktoriia [1 ]
Managave, Shreyas [3 ]
Voigt, Christian C. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Leibniz Inst Zoo & Wildlife Res, Berlin, Germany
[2] Free Univ Berlin, Inst Biol, Dept Anim Behav, Berlin, Germany
[3] Indian Inst Sci Educ & Res IISER Pune, Dept Earth & Climate Sci, Pune, India
关键词
bats; elevational gradients; Himalaya; niche expansion; niche packing; stable isotopes; ISOTOPIC NICHE; PATTERNS; MAMMALS; SPECIALIZATION; CHIROPTERA; EXPANSION; TRAITS;
D O I
10.1111/1365-2656.13897
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The change in species richness along elevational gradients is a well-known pattern in nature. Niche theory predicts that increasing species richness in assemblages can either lead to denser packing of niche space ('niche packing') or an expansion into its novel regions ('niche expansion'). Traditionally, these scenarios have been studied using functional traits but stable isotopes provide advantages such as identifying the degree of resource specialisation, or niche partitioning among functionally similar species. In this study, we evaluate the relevance of niche packing versus niche expansion by investigating stable carbon and nitrogen isotopic niche width and overlap among 23 bat species from six functional groups across a 1500 m elevational gradient in the Himalaya. Our results suggest that an increase in species richness in the low elevation is accompanied by small niche width with high overlap, whereas the high elevation assemblage shows large niche width with low overlap among functional group members. At the functional group level, edge-space foraging, trawling, and active gleaning bats have the highest niche width while passive gleaning bats that are only found in high elevations are isotopic specialists showing low overlap with other groups. Edge and open-space foraging bats showed idiosyncratic changes in niche width across elevations. We also find that the niches of rhinolophid bats overlap with edge-space and open-space foraging bats despite their unique functional traits. These results support the idea that at low elevations high species richness is associated with niche packing while at high elevations strong niche partitioning prevails in dynamic and resource-poor environments. We conclude that although high elevation animal assemblages are often 'functionally underdispersed', that is show homogenous functional traits, our approach based on stable isotopes demonstrates niche partitioning among such functionally similar species.
引用
收藏
页码:863 / 874
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Ecological constraints on elevational gradients of bird species richness in Tajikistan
    Dilshod Akhrorov
    Tianlong Cai
    Gang Song
    Ping Fan
    Ahunim Fenitie Abebe
    Peng He
    Fumin Lei
    Avian Research, 2022, (02) : 183 - 193
  • [32] Elevational gradients of terricolous lichen species richness in the Western Himalaya
    Rai, Himanshu
    Khare, Roshni
    Baniya, Chitra Bahadur
    Upreti, Dalip Kumar
    Gupta, Rajan Kumar
    BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2015, 24 (05) : 1155 - 1174
  • [33] Species richness and structure of three Neotropical bat assemblages
    Rex, Katja
    Kelm, Detlev H.
    Wiesner, Kerstin
    Kunz, Thomas H.
    Voigt, Christian C.
    BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, 2008, 94 (03) : 617 - 629
  • [34] Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients
    D. Nogués-Bravo
    M. B. Araújo
    T. Romdal
    C. Rahbek
    Nature, 2008, 453 : 216 - 219
  • [35] Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients
    Nogues-Bravo, D.
    Araujo, M. B.
    Romdal, T.
    Rahbek, C.
    NATURE, 2008, 453 (7192) : 216 - U8
  • [36] Latitudinal patterns of species richness and range size of ferns along elevational gradients at the transition from tropics to subtropics
    Hernandez-Rojas, Adriana C.
    Kluge, Juergen
    Kroemer, Thorsten
    Carvajal-Hernandez, Cesar
    Silva-Mijangos, Libertad
    Miehe, Georg
    Lehnert, Marcus
    Weigand, Anna
    Kessler, Michael
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2020, 47 (06) : 1383 - 1397
  • [37] Determinants of plant species richness along elevational gradients: insights with climate, energy and water-energy dynamics
    Kumar, Abhishek
    Patil, Meenu
    Kumar, Pardeep
    Singh, Anand Narain
    ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2024, 13 (01)
  • [38] Elevational gradients and species richness: do methods change pattern perception?
    Rowe, Rebecca J.
    Lidgard, Scott
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2009, 18 (02): : 163 - 177
  • [39] Traits and climate are associated with first flowering day in herbaceous species along elevational gradients
    Bucher, Solveig Franziska
    Koenig, Patrizia
    Menzel, Annette
    Migliavacca, Mirco
    Ewald, Joerg
    Roemermann, Christine
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2018, 8 (02): : 1147 - 1158
  • [40] Sensitivity of Metrics of Phylogenetic Structure to Scale, Source of Data and Species Pool of Hummingbird Assemblages along Elevational Gradients
    Gonzalez-Caro, Sebastian
    Parra, Juan L.
    Graham, Catherine H.
    McGuire, Jimmy A.
    Daniel Cadena, Carlos
    PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (04):