Fecundity of trees and the colonization-competition hypothesis
Authored by JS Clark, S LaDeau, I Ibanez
Date Published: 2004
DOI: 10.1890/02-4093
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Colonization-competition trade-offs represent a stabilizing mechanism
that is thought to maintain diversity of forest trees. If so, then
early-successional species should benefit from high capacity factors
that contribute to seed production and dispersal, particularly the many
types of stochasticity that contribute to fecundity data. We develop a
hierarchical Bayes modeling structure, and we use it to estimate
fecundity schedules from the two types of data that ecologists typically
collect, including seed-trap counts and observations of tree status. The
posterior density is obtained using Markov-chain Monte Carlo techniques.
The flexible structure yields estimates of size and covariate effects on
seed production, variability associated with population heterogeneity, and interannual stochasticity (variability and serial autocorrelation), sex ratio, and dispersal. It admits the errors in data associated with
the ability to accurately recognize tree status and process
misspecification. We estimate year-by-year seed-production rates for all
individuals in each of nine sample stands from two regions and up to I I
years. A rich characterization of differences among species and
relationships among individuals allows evaluation of a number of
hypotheses related to masting, effective population sizes, and location
and covariate effects. It demonstrates large bias in previous methods.
We focus on implications for colonization-competition and a related
hypothesis, the successional niche-trade-offs in the capacity to exploit
high resource availability in early successional environments vs. the
capacity to survive low-resource conditions late in succession.
Contrary to predictions of trade-off hypotheses, we find no relationship
between successional status and fecundity, dispersal, or expected
arrivals at distant sites. Results suggest a mechanism for maintenance
of diversity that may be more general than colonization-competition and
successional niches. High variability and strong individual effects
(variability within populations) generate massive stochasticity in
recruitment that, when combined with ``storage,{''} may provide a
stabilizing mechanism. The storage effect stabilizes diversity when
species differences ensure that responses to stochasticity are not
highly correlated among species. Process variability and individual
effects mean that many species have the advantage at different times and
places even in the absence of ``deterministic{''} trade-offs. Not only
does colonization vary among species, but also individual behavior is
highly stochastic and weakly correlated among members of the-same
population. Although these factors are the dominant sources of
variability in data sets (substantially larger than the deterministic
relationships typically examined), they have not been not included in
the models that ecologists have used to evaluate mechanisms of species
coexistence (e.g., even individual-based models lack random individual
effects). Recognition of the mechanisms of coexistence requires not only
heuristic models that capture the principal sources of stochasticity, but also data-modeling techniques that allow for their estimation.
Tags
models
Coexistence
Biodiversity
Dispersal
Variability
Succession
Seed production
Recruitment limitation
Tropical trees
Forest trees