Abstract
The organisation of species assemblages is affected by environmental factors acting at different spatial scales. To understand the drivers behind the community structure of invertebrates associated with marram grass -the dominant dune-building ecosystem engineer in European coastal dunes-, we set up a stratified sampling scheme in six biogeographic sectors along the North Sea. We tested to which degree local invertebrate species composition is affected by the spatial organisation of marram grass tussocks. We used distance-based RDA and a joint species distribution modelling approach to understand how species traits and their phylogeny contribute to invertebrate community composition. We show biogeography to be the most important driver, followed by species-specific responses to marram grass cover and vitality. Traits and phylogeny had a minor influence on the species distribution patterns. The residual species covariation suggests negative interactions between groups of specialist and generalist species. From an applied perspective, our research indicates that the biological value of nature-based solutions for the restoration and design of coastal dunes can be optimized by the design of a heterogeneous marram grass planting scheme and/or development.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
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