Large niche differences emerge at the recruitment stage to stabilize grassland coexistence
Authored by Chengjin Chu, Peter B Adler
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1890/14-1741.1
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Abstract
Niche differences and average fitness differences jointly determine
coexistence. However, little empirical information about the magnitude
of these two mechanisms is available. Using multispecies population
models fit to long-term demographic data for common, co-occurring
species in five grassland and shrubland plant communities in western
North America, we estimated the strength of stabilizing niche
differences and average fitness differences. In all five communities, both pairwise and full community comparisons showed evidence for strong
stabilizing mechanisms and relatively small average fitness differences.
For a total of 17 species pairs, a measure of niche differences based on
simulations of invasion growth rates ranged from 0.59 to 0.93 with a
mean of 0.81, where 0 indicates complete niche overlap and 1 indicates
zero niche overlap. A corresponding measure of average fitness
differences ranged from 1.02 to 2.54 with a mean of 1.53, where 1
indicates identical fitness and a value of 2 indicates a fourfold
difference in sensitivity to competition. Comparisons of full
communities displayed similar patterns: niche differences ranged from
0.58 to 0.69 with a mean of 0.64, and the average fitness differences
ranged from 1.42 to 1.63 with a mean of 1.47. In almost every case, the
stabilizing mechanisms were much stronger than minimally necessary to
prevent competitive exclusion. Considering that all but one of the
species we studied are perennial grasses, which are often grouped in the
same functional type, the magnitude of these niche differences is
surprising. In all five communities, differences between intra-and
interspecific effects at the recruitment stage contributed far more to
stabilization than interactions affecting growth and survival. Our
results indicate that for these abundant, co-occurring species (1)
dynamics are far from neutral, with strong niche differences and weak
fitness differences combining to stabilize coexistence, and (2)
processes operating at early life stages account for a large proportion
of the stabilizing effect. Given the limitations of our inductive
approach, both these findings represent hypotheses in need of
experimental testing.
Tags
Climate-change
Structured populations
Species interactions
Neutral theory
Negative density-dependence
Water green-algae
Tropical tree
Phylogenetic relatedness
Promotes coexistence
Perennial grassland