Non-indigenous molluscs in the Eastern Mediterranean have distinct traits and cannot replace historic ecosystem functioning

Autor(en)
Jan Steger, Marija Bošnjak, Jonathan Belmaker, Bella S. Galil, Martin Zuschin, Paolo G. Albano
Abstrakt

Aim
A large body of ecological theory predicts that non-indigenous species (NIS) are successful invaders if their niches overlap little with native taxa. Native–non-indigenous trait dissimilarity, however, may also be observed if NIS have outcompeted ecologically similar native species. Discriminating these scenarios is essential for assessing invasion impacts but requires baseline assemblage data that are frequently unavailable. We overcome this impediment by analysing death assemblages – identifiable organism remains in the seafloor – which are natural community archives. Focusing on molluscs from the heavily invaded Eastern Mediterranean, we gain insights into the contentious role of competitive displacement by NIS as the primary driver of the massive regional declines of native populations, and their potential to alter ecosystem functioning.

Location
Israel/Eastern Mediterranean.

Time period
Pre-Lessepsian invasion (pre-1869) to contemporary.

Major taxa studied
Mollusca.

Methods
We sampled molluscan living and death assemblages from various substrates on the Israeli shelf and compiled trait information on all constituent species. We then compared the abundance-weighted trait composition and functional diversity of native and non-indigenous assemblage components. Death assemblage time-coverage was quantified radiometrically.

Results
Native and non-indigenous assemblage components consistently differed in trait composition, both in present-day (i.e., living) and historical (i.e., death) assemblages, irrespective of habitat conditions. Furthermore, present-day non-indigenous assemblage components had a different trait composition than historical native assemblages. These findings suggest that the increasing NIS dominance has considerably altered the functional properties of shallow-water molluscan assemblages.

Main conclusions
By utilizing death assemblages, we show that native and non-indigenous assemblage components have differed in trait composition since the onset of the invasion, suggesting that competition was unlikely the primary driver of the regional-scale native biodiversity loss. Our findings, however, also imply that NIS cannot functionally compensate for native species disappearance. Instead, the transition towards increasingly NIS-dominated assemblages has profoundly altered ecosystem functioning, with unknown consequences.

Organisation(en)
Department für Funktionelle und Evolutionäre Ökologie, Institut für Paläontologie
Externe Organisation(en)
Universität Wien, Croatian Natural History Museum, Tel Aviv University, Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn
Journal
Global Ecology and Biogeography
Band
31
Seiten
89-102
Anzahl der Seiten
14
ISSN
1466-822X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13415
Publikationsdatum
10-2021
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ÖFOS 2012
106047 Tierökologie, 106026 Ökosystemforschung, 106021 Meeresbiologie, 106053 Zoogeographie
Schlagwörter
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Global and Planetary Change, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, Ecology
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 14 – Leben unter Wasser
Link zum Portal
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/de/publications/nonindigenous-molluscs-in-the-eastern-mediterranean-have-distinct-traits-and-cannot-replace-historic-ecosystem-functioning(706d1d84-a481-4b11-9b89-ba7ef424b1c4).html