Hydrologically defined niches reveal a basis for species richness in plant communities

被引:401
|
作者
Silvertown, J
Dodd, ME
Gowing, DJG
Mountford, JO
机构
[1] Open Univ, Dept Biol, Ecol & Conservat Res Grp, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, Bucks, England
[2] Cranfield Univ, Silsoe Coll, Bedford MK45 4DT, England
[3] NERC, Inst Terr Ecol, Huntingdon PE17 2LS, England
关键词
D O I
10.1038/21877
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Species-rich plant communities are prized repositories of biodiversity and a dwindling resource, but how the large numbers of species that characterize such communities are able to coexist is poorly understood. Resource-based competition theory predicts that stable coexistence between species depends on each being a superior competitor in its own niche(1). The theoretical problem is that plants all require the same resources and acquire them in a very limited variety of ways, so observed niche overlaps are high(2,3) and exclusion of all but the best competitor is the predicted result. This problem, central to community ecology, has elicited a variety of theoretical solutions(4-7), several of which invoke some degree of niche separation in time or space(8,9). The signature of niche separation in the field is to be found in community structure, which should indicate (i) smaller than expected niche overlaps on relevant niche axes and (ii) a trade-off between species' resource use on orthogonal axes. Here we provide evidence for the existence of both these conditions in a species-rich plant community.
引用
收藏
页码:61 / 63
页数:3
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] SPECIES RICHNESS OF PLANT-COMMUNITIES - RELATIONSHIP WITH COMMUNITY GROWTH AND STRUCTURE
    SPECHT, RL
    GRUNDY, RI
    SPECHT, A
    ISRAEL JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 1990, 39 (4-6): : 465 - 480
  • [22] Local plant species richness depends on the total area of alpine communities
    Onipchenko V.G.
    Pavlov V.N.
    Doklady Biological Sciences, 2009, 427 (1) : 381 - 383
  • [23] MAINTENANCE OF SPECIES-RICHNESS IN PLANT COMMUNITIES - IMPORTANCE OF REGENERATION NICHE
    GRUBB, PJ
    BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 1977, 52 (01) : 107 - 145
  • [24] Impact of invasive and native dominants on species richness and diversity of plant communities
    Hejda, Martin
    Sadlo, Jiri
    Kutlvasr, Josef
    Petrik, Petr
    Vitkova, Michaela
    Vojik, Martin
    Pysek, Petr
    Pergl, Jan
    PRESLIA, 2021, 93 (03) : 181 - 201
  • [25] Species richness increases the resilience of wetland plant communities in a tropical floodplain
    Carvalho, Priscilla
    Thomaz, Sidinei Magela
    Kobayashi, Josilaine Taeco
    Bini, Luis Mauricio
    AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2013, 38 (05) : 592 - 598
  • [26] A probability distribution model of small -scale species richness in plant communities
    Chen, Jun
    Gaborcik, Norbert
    Shiyomi, Masae
    ECOLOGICAL INFORMATICS, 2016, 33 : 101 - 108
  • [27] Functional identity versus species richness: herbivory resistance in plant communities
    Scherber, Christoph
    Heimann, Juliane
    Koeler, Guenter
    Mitschunas, Nadine
    Weisser, Wolfgang W.
    OECOLOGIA, 2010, 163 (03) : 707 - 717
  • [28] Species richness is a surrogate for rare plant occurrence, but not conservation value, in boreal plant communities
    Varina E. Crisfield
    Jacqueline M. Dennett
    Catherine K. Denny
    Lingfeng Mao
    Scott E. Nielsen
    Biodiversity and Conservation, 2020, 29 : 99 - 114
  • [29] Functional identity versus species richness: herbivory resistance in plant communities
    Christoph Scherber
    Juliane Heimann
    Günter Köhler
    Nadine Mitschunas
    Wolfgang W. Weisser
    Oecologia, 2010, 163 : 707 - 717
  • [30] Plant species richness is not consistently associated with productivity in experimental subalpine meadow plant communities
    Yuan, Ziqiang
    Yu, Kailiang
    Epstein, Howard
    Stefanova, Katia
    Zhang, Rong
    FOLIA GEOBOTANICA, 2015, 50 (03) : 207 - 217