“…In theory, species composition of stable patches with high connectivity is molded by biotic interactions, whereas those of spatially isolated ephemeral patches are governed by dispersal limitation (Figure ). The latter example, the patch‐tracker model (sensu Snäll, Ribeiro, & Rydin, ), is globally represented by phylogenetically disparate groups adapted to ephemeral substrates of terrestrial and aquatic environments alike (Altermatt, IlmariPajunen, & Ebert, ; Göthe, Angeler, & Sandin, ; Hanski, ; Holá, Vesalainen, Tesitel, & Laaka‐Lindberg, ; Miller & terHorst, ; Mungia, ; Snäll et al, ; Yawata et al, ; Zartman, Nascimento, Cagani, Alvarenga, & Snäll, ). Demographic evidence from patch‐tracking metacommunities such as invertebrates in manipulated micro‐landscapes (Gonzalez, Lawton, Gilbert, Blackburn, & Evans, ), inquilines of water columns (Kneitel & Miller, ), and tropical forest epiphylls (Zartman & Shaw, ) all point to the importance of regional dispersal for their metacommunity maintenance.…”