TY - JOUR
T1 - Plant diets of land snail community members are similar in composition but differ in richness
AU - Hendriks, Kasper P.
AU - Bisschop, Karen
AU - Kavanagh, James C.
AU - Kortenbosch, Hylke H.
AU - Larue, Anaïs E.A.
AU - Bonte, Dries
AU - Duijm, Elza J.
AU - Salles, Joana Falcão
AU - Richter Mendoza, Francisco J.
AU - Schilthuizen, Menno
AU - Etienne, Rampal S.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Liew Thor-Seng of the Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia, for kindly assisting with fieldwork and export license applications. Marti Anderson commented on earlier versions of the statistical analyses (PERMANOVA). Groningen University students Annabel Slettenhaar and Manon Spaans collected snail trait data. This research was funded by NWO (VICI grant no. 865.13.003; awarded to RSE), KNAW (Fonds Ecologie, reference Eco/1711; awarded to KPH), Leopold III-Fonds (awarded in 2017 to KB), Ghent University (Special Research Fund, BOF; awarded to KB), University of Groningen (Ubbo Emmius sandwich program; awarded to KB) and the Malacological Society of London (Early Career Research Grant; awarded to KPH).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Malacological Society of London.
PY - 2021/12/1
Y1 - 2021/12/1
N2 - Herbivore diets are often generalistic, and communities of herbivores tend to share much of their diets. In the tropical lowlands of Malaysian Borneo, tens of different noncarnivorous land snail species are able to coexist in communities on limestone outcrops. We tried to answer the question whether diet differentiation plays a role in their coexistence. We show, with a large metabarcoding study of the plant diet from gut contents of 658 individual snails (from 26 species, with a focus on three of the most common species in the region), that the different snail species indeed share much of their plant diet, but that mean diet richness varies strongly among species (up to 15.3×). These differences are mostly explained by snail size, with larger snails having wider diets. Furthermore, phylogenetic analyses of the plant diet by individual snails showed signs of clustering in c. 28% of the individuals, possibly suggesting phylogenetic specialization, although such clustering was weak when diets were considered by species. We discuss how observed trends in diet richness and diet clustering could also be explained by random feeding, with larger species simply eating more or less specifically, and by other, noncompetitive interactions, such as snails avoiding desiccation. Our study shows how to efficiently put the power of metabarcoding to work in unravelling the complex community processes commonly encountered in tropical ecosystems and is thus of substantial relevance to both community ecologists and conservationists.
AB - Herbivore diets are often generalistic, and communities of herbivores tend to share much of their diets. In the tropical lowlands of Malaysian Borneo, tens of different noncarnivorous land snail species are able to coexist in communities on limestone outcrops. We tried to answer the question whether diet differentiation plays a role in their coexistence. We show, with a large metabarcoding study of the plant diet from gut contents of 658 individual snails (from 26 species, with a focus on three of the most common species in the region), that the different snail species indeed share much of their plant diet, but that mean diet richness varies strongly among species (up to 15.3×). These differences are mostly explained by snail size, with larger snails having wider diets. Furthermore, phylogenetic analyses of the plant diet by individual snails showed signs of clustering in c. 28% of the individuals, possibly suggesting phylogenetic specialization, although such clustering was weak when diets were considered by species. We discuss how observed trends in diet richness and diet clustering could also be explained by random feeding, with larger species simply eating more or less specifically, and by other, noncompetitive interactions, such as snails avoiding desiccation. Our study shows how to efficiently put the power of metabarcoding to work in unravelling the complex community processes commonly encountered in tropical ecosystems and is thus of substantial relevance to both community ecologists and conservationists.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85143515413&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/mollus/eyab041
DO - 10.1093/mollus/eyab041
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85143515413
SN - 0260-1230
VL - 87
JO - Journal of Molluscan Studies
JF - Journal of Molluscan Studies
IS - 4
M1 - eyab041
ER -