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1 September 2013 Biological Legacies: Direct Early Ecosystem Recovery and Food Web Reorganization after a Volcanic Eruption in Alaska
Lawrence R. Walker, Derek S. Sikes, Anthony R. Degange, Stephen C. Jewett, Gary Michaelson, Sandra L. Talbot, Stephen S. Talbot, Bronwen Wang, Jeffrey C. Williams
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Attempts to understand how communities assemble following a disturbance are challenged by the difficulty of determining the relative importance of stochastic and deterministic processes. Biological legacies, which result from organisms that survive a disturbance, can favour deterministic processes in community assembly and improve predictions of successional trajectories. Recently disturbed ecosystems are often so rapidly colonized by propagules that the role of biological legacies is obscured. We studied biological legacies on a remote volcanic island in Alaska following a devastating eruption where the role of colonization from adjacent communities was minimized. The role of biological legacies in the near shore environment was not clear, because although some kelp survived, they were presumably overwhelmed by the many vagile propagules in a marine environment. The legacy concept was most applicable to terrestrial invertebrates and plants that survived in remnants of buried soil that were exposed by post-eruption erosion. If the legacy concept is extended to include ex situ survival by transient organisms, then it was also applicable to the island's thousands of seabirds, because the seabirds survived the eruption by leaving the island and have begun to return and rebuild their nests as local conditions improve. Our multi-trophic examination of biological legacies in a successional context suggests that the relative importance of biological legacies varies with the degree of destruction, the availability of colonizing propagules, the spatial and temporal scales under consideration, and species interactions. Understanding the role of biological legacies in community assembly following disturbances can help elucidate the relative importance of colonists versus survivors, the role of priority effects among the colonists, convergence versus divergence of successional trajectories, the influence of spatial heterogeneity, and the role of island biogeographical concepts.

Lawrence R. Walker, Derek S. Sikes, Anthony R. Degange, Stephen C. Jewett, Gary Michaelson, Sandra L. Talbot, Stephen S. Talbot, Bronwen Wang, and Jeffrey C. Williams "Biological Legacies: Direct Early Ecosystem Recovery and Food Web Reorganization after a Volcanic Eruption in Alaska," Ecoscience 20(3), 240-251, (1 September 2013). https://doi.org/10.2980/20-3-3603
Received: 28 February 2013; Accepted: 1 August 2013; Published: 1 September 2013
KEYWORDS
ALEUTIAN ISLANDS
Arthropodes
Arthropods
biological legacy
Food web
île Kasatochi
îles Aléoutiennes
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