Impacts of dispersal limitation on temporal biodiversity patterns in a neutral model
Authored by Youhua Chen
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2015.03.007
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Abstract
In this brief report, potential impacts of different dispersal
assumptions on the temporal biodiversity patterns in a neutral model
were evaluated using a simple spatially explicit lattice model. The
results show that, immigration from metacommunity is much more important
than local dispersal from neighboring sites to determine the temporal
species richness of local neutral community. Such an observation was
consistent over different initial configurations and various immigration
rates. Moreover, the calculation of Jaccard's similarity index suggests
that, when regional immigration is spatially limited (i.e., individuals
of species can only disperse to the edge areas of the local community
from the metacommunity), temporal species compositional similarity would
be usually larger than those scenarios where regional immigration is not
limited. That is, species replacement in spatially limited scenarios is
much slower than those scenarios where dispersal of species is
unlimited. In conclusion, regional dispersal limitation plays
deterministic roles on structuring species diversity patterns in local
neutral communities. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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