TY - JOUR
T1 - Disentangling elevational richness
T2 - a multi-scale hierarchical Bayesian occupancy model of Colorado ant communities
AU - Szewczyk, Tim M.
AU - McCain, Christy M.
N1 - The author was not affiliated to SAMS at the time of publication
Funding Information:
Acknowledgements – We thank the members of the McCain lab, QDT, Maxwell Joseph, Kevin Bracy Knight, Helen McCreery, and two anonymous reviewers. Funding – This study was funded by NSF (McCain: DEB 0949601), the CU Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Dept, and the CU Museum of Natural History. Author contributions – CMM designed and funded the sampling. TMS identified specimens and developed the model. Both authors collected field data and contributed to the manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Authors
PY - 2019/5/3
Y1 - 2019/5/3
N2 - Understanding the forces that shape the distribution of biodiversity across spatial scales is central in ecology and critical to effective conservation. To assess effects of possible richness drivers, we sampled ant communities on four elevational transects across two mountain ranges in Colorado, USA, with seven or eight sites on each transect and twenty repeatedly sampled pitfall trap pairs at each site each for a total of 90 d. With a multi-scale hierarchical Bayesian community occupancy model, we simultaneously evaluated the effects of temperature, productivity, area, habitat diversity, vegetation structure, and temperature variability on ant richness at two spatial scales, quantifying detection error and genus-level phylogenetic effects. We fit the model with data from one mountain range and tested predictive ability with data from the other mountain range. In total, we detected 105 ant species, and richness peaked at intermediate elevations on each transect. Species-specific thermal preferences drove richness at each elevation with marginal effects of site-scale productivity. Trap-scale richness was primarily influenced by elevation-scale variables along with a negative impact of canopy cover. Soil diversity had a marginal negative effect while daily temperature variation had a marginal positive effect. We detected no impact of area, land cover diversity, trap-scale productivity, or tree density. While phylogenetic relationships among genera had little influence, congeners tended to respond similarly. The hierarchical model, trained on data from the first mountain range, predicted the trends on the second mountain range better than multiple regression, reducing root mean squared error up to 65%. Compared to a more standard approach, this modeling framework better predicts patterns on a novel mountain range and provides a nuanced, detailed evaluation of ant communities at two spatial scales.
AB - Understanding the forces that shape the distribution of biodiversity across spatial scales is central in ecology and critical to effective conservation. To assess effects of possible richness drivers, we sampled ant communities on four elevational transects across two mountain ranges in Colorado, USA, with seven or eight sites on each transect and twenty repeatedly sampled pitfall trap pairs at each site each for a total of 90 d. With a multi-scale hierarchical Bayesian community occupancy model, we simultaneously evaluated the effects of temperature, productivity, area, habitat diversity, vegetation structure, and temperature variability on ant richness at two spatial scales, quantifying detection error and genus-level phylogenetic effects. We fit the model with data from one mountain range and tested predictive ability with data from the other mountain range. In total, we detected 105 ant species, and richness peaked at intermediate elevations on each transect. Species-specific thermal preferences drove richness at each elevation with marginal effects of site-scale productivity. Trap-scale richness was primarily influenced by elevation-scale variables along with a negative impact of canopy cover. Soil diversity had a marginal negative effect while daily temperature variation had a marginal positive effect. We detected no impact of area, land cover diversity, trap-scale productivity, or tree density. While phylogenetic relationships among genera had little influence, congeners tended to respond similarly. The hierarchical model, trained on data from the first mountain range, predicted the trends on the second mountain range better than multiple regression, reducing root mean squared error up to 65%. Compared to a more standard approach, this modeling framework better predicts patterns on a novel mountain range and provides a nuanced, detailed evaluation of ant communities at two spatial scales.
KW - community
KW - diversity
KW - elevational gradient
KW - Formicidae
KW - predictive model
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U2 - 10.1111/ecog.04115
DO - 10.1111/ecog.04115
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85059475324
SN - 0906-7590
VL - 42
SP - 977
EP - 988
JO - Ecography
JF - Ecography
IS - 5
ER -