The Effect of Positive Interactions on Temporal Turnover of Community Composition along an Environmental Gradient
Authored by Youshi Wang, Zhiyong Yang, Shurong Zhou, Janne Soininen, Dexiecuo Ai, Yali Li, Chengjin Chu
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0078698
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Abstract
It has been demonstrated that the interplay between negative and
positive interactions simultaneously shapes community structure and
composition. However, few studies have attempted to examine the effect
of facilitation on compositional changes in communities through time.
Additionally, due to the difficulties in collecting the long-term data, it would be useful to indicate the rate of temporal turnover using a
readily obtainable metric. Using an individual-based model incorporating
plant strategies, we examined the role of facilitation on the temporal
turnover of communities located at different positions along an
environmental gradient for three model scenarios: CM without
facilitation; CFM-U, a unimodal relationship between facilitation and
environmental severity; and CFM-L, a positively linear relationship
between facilitation and environmental severity. Our results
demonstrated that facilitation could increase, decrease or have no
remarkable effect on temporal turnover. The specific outcome depended on
the location of the focal community across the environmental gradient
and the model employed. Compared with CM, the inclusion of positive
interactions (i.e. CFM-U and CFM-L), at intermediate environmental
stress levels (such as S = 0.7 and 0.8) resulted in lower Bray-Curtis
similarity values; at other severity levels, facilitation slowed down
(such as S = 0.3 and 0.4 at low to medium stress levels, and S = 0.9 at
high stress levels) or had only a subtle effect (such as at S = 0.1) on
temporal turnover. We also found that the coefficient of variation (CV)
in species abundances and the rate of temporal variability showed a
significant quadratic relationship. Our theoretical analysis contributes
to the understanding of factors driving temporal turnover in biotic
communities, and presents a potential metric (i.e. CV in species
abundances) assessing the consequences of ongoing environmental change
on community structure.
Tags
Competition
Facilitation
time
North-america
Biotic interactions
Species richness
Plant-populations
Abiotic stress
Interactions
increase
Beta diversity