AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates biodiversity patterns of Oribatida, a group of soil surface-dwelling invertebrates, in montane ecosystems on the north slope of Changbai Mountain, focusing on how their diversity is influenced by altitude (600 to 2300m).
  • - Findings reveal that both alpha and beta diversity of Oribatida generally decrease with increasing altitude, peaking at 2000m, and community structure is more affected by species turnover rather than nestedness.
  • - The research highlights that elevation and climate are key drivers of Oribatida communities, with geographical distance playing a significant role in variations between adjacent altitudes, contributing valuable insights to biodiversity studies in these ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Distribution patterns of biodiversity and environmental interactions are dominant themes in ecology. In montane ecosystems, biodiversity is closely associated with altitudinal gradients. However, studies of biodiversity in montane ecosystems are focused on plants and vertebrates, with relatively less on invertebrates. Here, the present study used a Vortis arthropod suction sampler to explore the biodiversity patterns of soil surface-dwelling Oribatida and their drivers along an altitudinal gradient (600, 800, 1600, 2000, and 2300 m) from typical temperate forests, evergreen coniferous forests, subalpine birch forests to alpine tundra on the north slope of Changbai Mountain, Northeast China. , , and were the dominant soil surface-dwelling species on Changbai Mountain. Generally, alpha diversity and beta diversity of soil surface-dwelling Oribatida decreased with the rising altitude, with a peaking density value at 2000 m. The result of beta diversity showed that the structures of community were more influenced by the species turnover component than the nestedness component. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) ordination showed that the community structure of soil surface-dwelling Oribatida varied significantly along the altitudinal gradient. The variance partitioning showed that the elevation and climatic conditions determined the soil surface-dwelling Oribatida community. Spatial filtering represented by geographic and elevation distances was particularly associated with soil surface-dwelling Oribatida community variation between altitudes on Changbai Mountain. However, the variation of the Oribatida community between adjacent altitudes was only associated with geographic distance. Our study provides supportive evidence for the biodiversity analyzing of soil surface-dwelling Oribatida in montane ecosystems along an altitudinal gradient.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10196937PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10105DOI Listing

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  • - The study investigates biodiversity patterns of Oribatida, a group of soil surface-dwelling invertebrates, in montane ecosystems on the north slope of Changbai Mountain, focusing on how their diversity is influenced by altitude (600 to 2300m).
  • - Findings reveal that both alpha and beta diversity of Oribatida generally decrease with increasing altitude, peaking at 2000m, and community structure is more affected by species turnover rather than nestedness.
  • - The research highlights that elevation and climate are key drivers of Oribatida communities, with geographical distance playing a significant role in variations between adjacent altitudes, contributing valuable insights to biodiversity studies in these ecosystems.
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