Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/29128
Appears in Collections:Biological and Environmental Sciences Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: Dispersal capacity shapes responses of river island invertebrate assemblages to vegetation structure, island area, and flooding
Author(s): Vanbergen, Adam J
Woodcock, Ben A
Gray, Alan
Andrews, Christopher
Ives, Stephen
Kjeldsen, Thomas R
Laize, Cedric L R
Chapman, Daniel S
Butler, Adam
O'Hare, Matthew T
Keywords: Dispersal
disturbance
habitat structure
niche
riparian
trait
Issue Date: Jul-2017
Date Deposited: 27-Mar-2019
Citation: Vanbergen AJ, Woodcock BA, Gray A, Andrews C, Ives S, Kjeldsen TR, Laize CLR, Chapman DS, Butler A & O'Hare MT (2017) Dispersal capacity shapes responses of river island invertebrate assemblages to vegetation structure, island area, and flooding. Insect Conservation and Diversity, 10 (4), pp. 341-353. https://doi.org/10.1111/icad.12231
Abstract: 1. Riparian invertebrate communities occupy a dynamic ecotone where hydrogeomorphological (e.g. river flows) and ecological (e.g. succession) processes may govern assemblage structure by filtering species according to their traits (e.g. dispersal capacity, niche). 2. We surveyed terrestrial invertebrate assemblages (millipedes, carabid beetles, spiders) in 28 river islands across four river catchments over 2 years. We predicted that distinct ecological niches would produce taxon-specific responses of abundance and species richness to: (i) disturbance from episodic floods, (ii) island area, (iii) island vegetation structure, and (iv) landscape structure. We also predicted that responses would differ according to species' dispersal ability (aerial vs. terrestrial only), indicating migration was sustaining community structure. 3. Invertebrate abundance and richness was affected by different combinations of vegetation structure, island area, and flood disturbance according to species' dispersal capacity. Carabid abundance related negatively to episodic floods, particularly for flightless species, but the other taxa were insensitive to this disturbance. Larger islands supported greater abundance of carabids and all invertebrates able to disperse aerially. Vegetation structure, particularly tree canopy density and plant richness, related positively to invertebrate abundance across all taxa and aerial dispersers, whereas terrestrial disperser richness related positively to tree cover. Landscape structure did not influence richness or abundance. 4. Multiple ecological processes govern riparian invertebrate assemblages. Overall insensitivity to flood disturbance and responses contingent on dispersal mode imply that spatial dynamics subsidise the communities through immigration. Particular habitat features (e.g. trees, speciose vegetation) may provide refuges from disturbance and concentration of niches and food resources.
DOI Link: 10.1111/icad.12231
Rights: This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Vanbergen, A. J., Woodcock, B. A., Gray, A. , Andrews, C. , Ives, S. , Kjeldsen, T. R., Laize, C. L., Chapman, D. S., Butler, A. and O'Hare, M. T. (2017), Dispersal capacity shapes responses of river island invertebrate assemblages to vegetation structure, island area, and flooding. Insect Conservation and Diversity, 10: 341-353, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1111/icad.12231. This article may be used for noncommercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for self-archiving.

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