The effects of density, spatial pattern, and competitive symmetry on size variation in simulated plant populations
Authored by J Weiner, P Stoll, H Muller-Landau, A Jasentuliyana
Date Published: 2001
DOI: 10.1086/321988
Sponsors:
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
Harvard Forest
Roche Research Foundation
Platforms:
C
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://www.ecol.kvl.dk/admin/php3/research-bot.php3
Abstract
Patterns of size inequality in crowded plant populations are often taken
to be indicative of the degree of size asymmetry of competition, but
recent research suggests that some of the patterns attributed to
size-asymmetric competition could be due to spatial structure. To
investigate the theoretical relationships between plant density, spatial
pattern, and competitive size asymmetry in determining size variation in
crowded plant populations, we developed a spatially explicit, individual-based plant competition model based on overlapping zones of
influence. The zone of influence of each plant is modeled as a circle, growing in two dimensions, and is allometrically related to plant
biomass. The area of the circle represents resources potentially
available to the plant, and plants compete for resources in areas in
which they overlap. The size asymmetry of competition is reflected in
the rules for dividing up the overlapping areas. Theoretical plant
populations were grown in random and in perfectly uniform spatial
patterns at four densities under size-asymmetric and size-symmetric
competition. Both spatial pattern and size asymmetry contributed to size
variation, but their relative importance varied greatly over density and
over time. Early in stand development, spatial pattern was more
important than the symmetry of competition in determining the degree of
size variation within the population, but after plants grew and
competition intensified, the size asymmetry of competition became a much
more important source of size variation. Size variability was slightly
higher at higher densities when competition was symmetric and plants
were distributed nonuniformly in space. In a uniform spatial pattern, size variation increased with density only when competition was size
asymmetric. Our results suggest that when competition is size asymmetric
and intense, it will be more important in generating size variation than
is local variation in density. Our results and the available data are
consistent with the hypothesis that high levels of size inequality
commonly observed within crowded plant populations are largely due to
size-asymmetric competition, not to variation in local density.
Tags
Model
interference
growth
Mechanisms
Structure dynamics
Variability
Individuals
Neighborhood competition
Asymmetric competition
Monocultures