<p>The spatial
distribution of animals in a landscape depends mainly on the distribution of resources.
Resource availability is often facilitated by other species and can positively
influence local species diversity and affect community structure. Species that
significantly change resource availability are often termed, ecosystem
engineers. Identifying these species is important but predicting where they
have large or small impacts is a key challenge that will enhance the usefulness
of the ecosystem engineering concept. In harsh and stressful environments, the stress
gradient hypothesis predicts that community structure and function will be increasingly
influenced by facilitative interactions. To test this hypothesis, we investigate how
the ecosystem engineering role and importance of sociable weavers <i>Philetairus
socius</i> varies across a spatial gradient of harshness, for which aridity
served as a proxy. These birds build large colonies that are home to hundreds
of weavers and host a wide range of avian and non-avian heterospecifics. We
investigated the use of weaver colonies on multiple taxa (invertebrates,
reptiles, birds, and mammals) at multiple sites across a >1000 km aridity gradient.
We show that sociable weaver colonies create localized biodiversity hots-spots across
their range. Furthermore, trees containing sociable weaver colonies maintained localized
animal diversity at sites with lower rainfall, an effect not as pronounced at sites
with higher rainfall. Our results were consistent with predictions of the stress
gradient hypothesis, and we provide one of the first tests of this hypothesis in
terrestrial animal communities. Facilitation and amelioration by ecosystem engineers
may mitigate some of the extreme impacts of environmental harshness.<b></b></p>
Funding
DST-NRF Centre of Excellence at the FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology