Distribution of body sizes in arthropod taxa and communities

被引:24
|
作者
Novotny, V
Kindlmann, P
机构
关键词
D O I
10.2307/3546323
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Body size distributions of 16 arthropod taxa and 7 communities (species assemblages) were analysed. Body size distributions in taxa and in communities were close to lognormal (10 distributions out of 23 were not significantly different from lognormal, P>0.05). Their skewness was mostly positive (in 17 out of 23 data sets), but small (-0.26 to 0.43; in 15 out of 23 data sets it was not significantly different from zero, P>0.05). No evidence in support of the hypothesis that the decrease in the number of species of animals (S) from medium to the largest body length (L) can be described as S similar to L(xd) with x(d) close to -2 (May 1978, 1986) was found, as x(d) ranged from -9.1 to -1.8 in taxa and from -6.1 to -2.1 in communities. Alternative patterns were observed: there was a close correlation between x(d), i.e., the rate of decrease in the number of species from the modal to the largest body sizes, and x(a), i.e., the rate of increase in the number of species from the smallest to the modal body sizes. The most important result is that standard deviation and, consequently, x(a) and x(d), were correlated with the number of species within a taxon. These results indicate that both x(a) and x(d) values are determined by evolutionary dynamics idiosyncratic for each taxon. A large variability and no consistent pattern in the x(a) and x(d) values in communities indicate that there may be no general assembly rules determining overall body size distribution of species in insect taxocoenoses.
引用
收藏
页码:75 / 82
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Body sizes and body weights of humans
    Oeder, G
    DEUTSCHE MEDIZINISCHE WOCHENSCHRIFT, 1914, 40 : 917 - 918
  • [42] Variation in arthropod communities in response to urbanization: Seven years of arthropod monitoring in a desert city
    Bang, Christofer
    Faeth, Stanley H.
    LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING, 2011, 103 (3-4) : 383 - 399
  • [43] Human body sizes and body weights
    Schwiening, H
    DEUTSCHE MEDIZINISCHE WOCHENSCHRIFT, 1914, 40 : 556 - 558
  • [44] Quantitative Amplicon Sequencing Is Necessary to Identify Differential Taxa and Correlated Taxa Where Population Sizes Differ
    Epp Schmidt, Dietrich
    Maul, Jude E.
    Yarwood, Stephanie A.
    MICROBIAL ECOLOGY, 2023, 86 (04) : 2790 - 2801
  • [45] Quantitative Amplicon Sequencing Is Necessary to Identify Differential Taxa and Correlated Taxa Where Population Sizes Differ
    Dietrich Epp Schmidt
    Jude E. Maul
    Stephanie A. Yarwood
    Microbial Ecology, 2023, 86 : 2790 - 2801
  • [46] Biomasses of Arthropod Taxa Differentially Increase on Nitrogen-Fertilized Willows and Cottonwoods
    Wiesenborn, William D.
    RESTORATION ECOLOGY, 2011, 19 (03) : 323 - 332
  • [47] Unique arthropod communities on different host-plant genotypes results in greater arthropod diversity
    Ferrier, Sharon M.
    Bangert, Randy K.
    Hersch-Green, Erika I.
    Bailey, Joseph K.
    Allan, Gery J.
    Whitham, Thomas G.
    ARTHROPOD-PLANT INTERACTIONS, 2012, 6 (02) : 187 - 195
  • [48] Taxa-function robustness in microbial communities
    Alexander Eng
    Elhanan Borenstein
    Microbiome, 6
  • [49] Variation among arthropod taxa in the amino acid content of exoskeleton and digestible tissue
    Reeves, J. T.
    Herzog, Colton
    Barnes, Cody L.
    Davis, Craig A.
    Fuhlendorf, Samuel D.
    Wilder, Shawn M.
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2023, 13 (07):
  • [50] Heterogeneous patterns of abundance of epigeic arthropod taxa along a major elevation gradient
    Roeder, Juliane
    Detsch, Florian
    Otte, Insa
    Appelhans, Tim
    Nauss, Thomas
    Peters, Marcell K.
    Brandl, Roland
    BIOTROPICA, 2017, 49 (02) : 217 - 228