The Contrasting Roles of Growth Traits and Architectural Traits in Diversity Maintenance in Clonal Plant Communities
Authored by Deborah E Goldberg, Radka Wildova, Tomas Herben
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1086/668013
Sponsors:
Czech Science Foundation
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/suppl/10.1086/668013/suppl_file/rhizome.zip
Abstract
Plant communities often exhibit high diversity, even though pairwise
experiments usually result in competitive hierarchies that should result
in competitive exclusion. Such experiments, however, do not typically
allow expression of spatial traits, despite theoretical studies showing
the potential importance of spatial mechanisms of diversity maintenance.
Here we ask whether, in a clonal plant model system, spatial trait
variation is more likely than growth trait variation to maintain
diversity. We used a field-calibrated, spatially explicit model to
simulate communities comprising sets of four simulated species differing
in only one of a suite of architectural or growth traits at a time, examining their dynamics and long-term diversity. To compare trait
manipulation effects across traits measured in different units, we
scaled traits to have identical effects on initial productivity. We
found that in communities of species differing only in an architectural
trait, all species usually persist, whereas communities of species
differing only in a growth trait experienced rapid competitive
exclusion. To examine the roles of equalizing and stabilizing mechanisms
in maintaining diversity, we conducted reciprocal invasion experiments
for species pairs differing only in single traits. The results suggest
that stabilizing mechanisms cannot account for the observed long-term
co-occurrence. Strong positive correlations between diversity and
similarity both in monoculture carrying capacity and reciprocal invasion
ability suggesting equalizing mechanisms may instead be responsible.
Tags
Dynamics
Coexistence
population
Simulation-model
Density
Species-diversity
Neighborhood competition
Interspecific competition
Grassland
perennials
Correlated traits