The effects of species pool, dispersal and competition on the diversity-productivity relationship
Authored by Sa Xiao, Martin Zobel, Robert Szava-Kovats, Meelis Partel
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-8238.2009.00511.x
Sponsors:
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Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Aim
The diversity-productivity relationship is a controversial issue in
ecology. Diversity is sometimes seen to increase with productivity but a
unimodal relationship has often been reported. Competitive exclusion was
cited initially to account for the decrease of diversity at high
productivity. Subsequently, the roles of evolutionary history (species
pool size) and dispersal rate have been acknowledged. We explore how the
effects of species pool, dispersal and competition combine to produce
different diversity-productivity relationships.
Methods
We use a series of simulations with a spatially explicit, individual-based model. Following empirical expectations, we used four
scenarios to characterize species pool size along the productivity
gradient (uniformly low and high, linear increase and unimodal).
Similarly, the dispersal rate varied along the productivity gradient
(uniformly low and high, and unimodal). We considered both neutral
communities and communities with competitive exclusion.
Results and main conclusions
Our model predicts that competitive interactions will result in unimodal
diversity-productivity relationships. The model often predicts unimodal
patterns in neutral communities as well, although the decline in
richness at high productivity is less than in competing communities. A
positive diversity-productivity relationship is simulated for neutral
communities when the species pool size increases with productivity and
the dispersal rate is high. This scenario is probably more widespread in
nature than the others since positive diversity-productivity
relationships have been observed more frequently than previously
expected, especially in the tropics and for woody species. Our simulated
effects of species pool, dispersal and competition on diversity patterns
can be linked to empirical observations to uncover mechanisms behind the
diversity-productivity relationship.
Tags
models
Facilitation
explanation
Plant-communities
Disturbance
Richness
Herbaceous vegetation
Habitat productivity
Evolutionary history
Gradient