Coexistence of perennial plants: an embarrassment of niches
Authored by Stephen P Ellner, Peter B Adler, Jonathan M Levine
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2010.01496.x
Sponsors:
David and Lucile Packard Foundation
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
P>Despite decades of research documenting niche differences between
species, we lack a quantitative understanding of their effect on
coexistence in natural communities. We perturbed an empirical sagebrush
steppe community model to remove the demographic effect of niche
differences and quantify their impact on coexistence. With stabilizing
mechanisms operating, all species showed positive growth rates when
rare, generating stable coexistence. Fluctuation-independent mechanisms
contributed more than temporal variability to coexistence and operated
more strongly on recruitment than growth or survival. As expected, removal of stabilizing niche differences led to extinction of all
inferior competitors. However, complete exclusion required 300-400
years, indicating small fitness differences among species. Our results
show an `excess' of niche differences: stabilizing mechanisms were not
only strong enough to maintain diversity but were much stronger than
necessary given the small fitness differences. The diversity of this
community cannot be understood without consideration of niche
differences.
Tags
environment
Demography
Maintenance
climate variability
Fluctuations
Forest
Communities
Species-diversity
Integral projection models
Competition models