Dissertação
Meu passado me condena! A autocorrelação temporal do fitoplâncton em um sistema lacustre neotropical
Fecha
2020-02-21Autor
Gabriel Estevão Nogueira Aguila
Institución
Resumen
Plankton metacommunity structure is known to respond to both local factors (i.e., biotic and
abiotic) and patch connectivity. Many studies are seeking to quantify the influence of local
and regional factors in determining the abundance of coexisting populations through the
adequacy of metacommunity models such as species-sorting and neutral to real data. Most
studies tested hypotheses in this regard from a spatial perspective, where community
structures in neighboring patches were evaluated, as well as important environmental
variables, and the importance of patches proximity and environmental similarity in predicting
community structure is quantified by applying variance partition methods. However, as
aquatic environments are not stable over time, the trade-off between species-sorting and
neutral dynamics can also be tested from a temporal perspective. Therefore, this study aimed
to quantify the influence of environmental and stochastic limitations of the phytoplankton
population on a set of unconnected natural lakes, where the community was sampled monthly
for eight years. Our hypothesis is that although its high turnover rate, phytoplankton
populations have an expressive temporal autocorrelation, that may be interpreted as neutral
dynamics. This interpretation comes from the fact that a population can persist in the
environment, even if this environment may not be suitable for the species needs. Thus, it is
expected that the autocorrelation can be as important as, or even more important than the
environmental effect to explain community structure. To test our hypothesis, we performed
the total variance partition separately for each of the 21 most abundant phytoplankton species,
assessing the importance of the temporal (i.e. abundance in the last month), spatial (i.e.
neighboring lakes), and environmental dimensions. Our hypothesis was corroborated, with the
temporal dimension having the greatest importance over all other dimensions. We suggest that
these organisms are “dispersing temporally”, with strong source-sink relationships over time,
outperforming environmental filters.