Abstract
Metacommunity ecology was developed to advance our understanding of the
local and regional processes that interact to shape community assembly.
However, empirical metacommunity studies have largely focused on
snapshot analyses that insufficiently describe the varying processes
that act at the metacommunity scale. Estuarine assemblages are
particularly underrepresented in empirical metacommunity studies despite
their importance to global ecosystems. In this study, we analyzed
long-term monitoring data using a Bayesian joint-species modeling
framework to infer assembly processes in estuarine metacommunities over
local and regional scales. We showed that metacommunity processes varied
between local and regional analyses: local analyses provided support for
species sorting among heterogeneous habitat patches, while regional
analyses revealed spatiotemporal patterns of community assembly related
to dispersal. Our work not only emphasizes the need to consider scale of
analysis when investigating empirical metacommunities, but also
highlights the importance of long-term ecological datasets for
describing metacommunity processes.