Niche differences, not fitness differences, explain predicted coexistence across ecological groups

被引:19
|
作者
Buche, Lisa [1 ,2 ]
Spaak, Jurg W. [3 ]
Jarillo, Javier [4 ]
De Laender, Frederik [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cadiz, Dept Biol, Inst Univ Ciencias del Mar INMAR, Puerto Real, Spain
[2] Univ Melbourne, Fac Sci, Sch BioSci, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
[3] Cornell Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Ithaca, NY USA
[4] Univ Namur, Inst Complex Syst NaXys, Namur, Belgium
基金
瑞士国家科学基金会;
关键词
clustering; coexistence; ecological groups; meta-analysis; methodological settings; modern coexistence theory; species interactions; MECHANISMS; MAINTENANCE; FACILITATION; COMPETITION; DIVERSITY; INTRANSITIVITY; DETERMINANTS; RELATEDNESS; SIMILARITY; EVOLUTION;
D O I
10.1111/1365-2745.13992
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Understanding the drivers of species coexistence is essential in ecology. Niche and fitness differences (i.e. how species limit themselves compared to others and species' differences in competitive ability, respectively) permit studying the consequences of species interactions. Yet, the multitude of methods to compute niche and fitness differences hampers cross-community comparisons. Such shortcoming leaves a gap in our understanding of the natural drivers of species coexistence and whether niche or/and fitness differences capture them. Here, we standardised niche and fitness differences across 953 species pairs to investigate species coexistence across ecological groups and methodological settings (experimental setup, natural co-occurrence, population model used and growth method). Using data gathered from 29 empirical papers, we asked whether large niche differences, small fitness differences or both explain predicted coexistence. Moreover, we performed an automated clustering algorithm to understand whether different underlying mechanisms drive species interactions. Finally, we tested whether any ecological or/and methodological settings drive these clusters. Species pairs predicted to coexist have larger niche differences but not smaller fitness differences than species pairs predicted not to coexist. Also, species pairs group into two clear clusters along the niche difference axis: those predicted to coexist and those that are not. Surprisingly, ecological or methodological settings do not drive these clusters. Synthesis. Overall, our results show that species coexistence is mainly influenced by mechanisms acting on niche differences, highlighting the importance of sustaining mechanisms that promote niche differences to maintain species coexistence. In addition, our results provide evidence that communities predicted to coexist differ from those that are not in ways that transcend their ecological grouping.
引用
收藏
页码:2785 / 2796
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The effect of non-linear competitive interactions on quantifying niche and fitness differences
    Spaak, Jurg W.
    Millet, Remi
    Ke, Po-Ju
    Letten, Andrew D.
    De Laender, Frederik
    THEORETICAL ECOLOGY, 2023, 16 (02) : 161 - 170
  • [42] Fitness differences override variation-dependent coexistence mechanisms in California grasslands
    Muehleisen, Andrew J.
    White, Caitlin T.
    Shoemaker, Lauren S.
    Suding, Katharine N.
    Adams, E. Ashley Shaw
    Hallett, Lauren M.
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2025, 113 (01) : 194 - 205
  • [43] The effect of non-linear competitive interactions on quantifying niche and fitness differences
    Jurg W. Spaak
    Remi Millet
    Po-Ju Ke
    Andrew D. Letten
    Frederik De Laender
    Theoretical Ecology, 2023, 16 : 161 - 170
  • [44] Niche and fitness differences determine invasion success and impact in laboratory bacterial communities
    Li, Shao-peng
    Tan, Jiaqi
    Yang, Xian
    Ma, Chao
    Jiang, Lin
    ISME JOURNAL, 2019, 13 (02): : 402 - 412
  • [45] Differences in variously measured physical fitness between education groups
    Valkeinen, Heli
    Harald, K.
    Borodulin, K.
    Makinen, T.
    Heliovaara, M.
    Sainio, P.
    Kestila, L.
    Kunst, A.
    Leino-Arjas, P.
    Rahkonen, O.
    Tammelin, T.
    Prattala, R.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2012, 22 : 134 - 134
  • [46] Can Reporting Heterogeneity Explain Differences in Depressive Symptoms Across Europe?
    Renske Kok
    Mauricio Avendano
    Teresa Bago d’Uva
    Johan Mackenbach
    Social Indicators Research, 2012, 105 : 191 - 210
  • [47] Can Reporting Heterogeneity Explain Differences in Depressive Symptoms Across Europe?
    Kok, Renske
    Avendano, Mauricio
    d'Uva, Teresa Bago
    Mackenbach, Johan
    SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH, 2012, 105 (02) : 191 - 210
  • [48] Examining Differences in Bias Homicide Across Victim Groups
    Gruenewald, Jeff
    Allison, Kayla
    CRIME & DELINQUENCY, 2018, 64 (03) : 316 - 341
  • [49] Differences in education and earnings across ethnic groups in Guatemala
    Patrinos, HA
    DEMOGRAPHIC DIVERSITY AND CHANGE IN THE CENTRAL AMERICAN ISTHMUS, 1997, : 145 - 164
  • [50] DRINKING ATTITUDES AND NORMS: ARE THERE DIFFERENCES ACROSS DRINKER GROUPS?
    Matthews, Sharon
    Dietze, Paul
    Room, Robin
    Jolley, Damien
    Chikritzhs, Tanya
    DRUG AND ALCOHOL REVIEW, 2009, 28 : A41 - A41