Spatial structure and the survival of an inferior competitor: a theoretical model of neighbourhood competition in plants
Authored by C Millier, F Goreaud, M Loreau
Date Published: 2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3800(02)00058-3
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Abstract
Recent changes in forestry practices raise new scientific issues
concerning the dynamics of mixed forests, and especially the coexistence
of different species. The spatial structure of such forest stands is
known to play a key role in their dynamics, but classical forest models
are not adapted to study this phenomenon. Foresters have therefore begun
to build distance-dependent individual-based forest models. As far as
theoretical models are concerned, the relation between competition and
the coexistence of various plant species in a mixed community has been
studied extensively in theoretical ecology, but few of the corresponding
models explicitly take the spatial structure of the community into
account. The aim of this paper is to present a simple individual-based
mechanistic model of neighbourhood competition that allows to study the
relation between the spatial structure of mixed stands and the survival
of an inferior competitor. We have build this model as an extension of
former theoretical models of competition for a soil resource, by adding
explicit spatial interactions. We have studied it both analytically and
through simulations, using generalised Gibbs processes to simulate
stands of various spatial structures. At the individual scale, we have
obtained an explicit relation between the survival of a tree, the
specific composition of its neighbourhood, and soil fertility. At the
stand scale, we have linked the number of surviving trees to the spatial
structure, and shown how interspecific repulsion and aggregated patterns
improve the survival of inferior competitors. We have also illustrated
how the competition process modifies the spatial structure of the stand.
Such a neighbourhood competition model is thus a useful tool to study
the relation between the spatial structure of a community and its
dynamics. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Coexistence
patterns
Population-dynamics
Gap
dynamics
Natural regeneration
Ecological field-theory
Tree diversity
Fontainebleau forest
Woody vegetation
Beech forest