Resource limitation alters effects of phenological shifts on inter-specific competition

被引:0
|
作者
Volker H. W. Rudolf
Sena McCrory
机构
[1] Rice University,BioSciences
来源
Oecologia | 2018年 / 188卷
关键词
Phenological shifts; Colonization; Historical contingency; Amphibian; Competition;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Phenological shifts can alter the relative arrival time of competing species in natural communities, but predicting the consequences for species interactions and community dynamics is a major challenge. Here we show that differences in relative arrival time can lead to predictable priority effects that alter the outcome of competitive interactions. By experimentally manipulating the relative arrival time of two competing tadpole species across a resource gradient, we found that delaying relative arrival of a species reduced the interaction asymmetry between species and could even reverse competitive dominance. However, the strength of these priority effects was contingent on the abundance of the shared resource. Priority effects were generally weak when resources were limited, but increased at higher resource levels. Importantly, this context dependency could be explained by a shift in per capita interaction strength driven by a shift in relative body sizes of competitors. These results shed new light into the mechanisms that drive variation in priority effects and help predict consequences of phenological shifts across different environments.
引用
收藏
页码:515 / 523
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Asymmetric inter-specific competition between invasive Phytolacca americana and its native congener
    Yun-Shan Liu
    Li Chen
    Yue Zhou
    Feng Xiao
    Dan-Feng Liu
    Yi Wang
    Plant Ecology, 2023, 224 : 315 - 324
  • [32] Patch exploitation strategies of parasitoids under indirect intra- and inter-specific competition
    Robert, Felix-Antoine
    Brodeur, Jacques
    Boivin, Guy
    ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, 2016, 41 (05) : 590 - 598
  • [33] Asymmetric inter-specific competition between invasive Phytolacca americana and its native congener
    Liu, Yun-Shan
    Chen, Li
    Zhou, Yue
    Xiao, Feng
    Liu, Dan-Feng
    Wang, Yi
    PLANT ECOLOGY, 2023, 224 (03) : 315 - 324
  • [34] INVERTEBRATES AND CATTLE POPULATION DYNAMICS IN A GRASSLAND ENVIRONMENT: A NONLINEAR INTER-SPECIFIC COMPETITION MODEL
    Tandon, Abhinav
    Dutta, Vaishnudebi
    JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS, 2024, 32 (01) : 37 - 74
  • [35] Evaluating inter-specific competition on individual radiata pine trees in Canterbury, New Zealand
    Kirongo, B
    Richardson, B
    Mason, EG
    MODELLING REGENERATION SUCCESS AND EARLY GROWTH OF FOREST STANDS, 1996, : 428 - 438
  • [36] Trophic consequences of competitive interactions in freshwater fish: Density dependent effects and impacts of inter-specific versus intra-specific competition
    De Santis, Vanessa
    Gutmann Roberts, Catherine
    Britton, J. Robert
    FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 2021, 66 (02) : 362 - 373
  • [37] Phenological responses of Oryza sativa, O. glaberrima and inter-specific rice cultivars on a toposquence in West Africa
    Michael Dingkuhn
    Folkard Asch
    Euphytica, 1999, 110
  • [38] Phenological responses of Oryza sativa, O-glaberrima and inter-specific rice cultivars on a toposquence in West Africa
    Dingkuhn, M
    Asch, F
    EUPHYTICA, 1999, 110 (02) : 109 - 126
  • [39] Environmental multi-scale effects on zooplankton inter-specific synchrony
    Buttay, Lucie
    Cazelles, Bernard
    Miranda, Ana
    Casas, Gerardo
    Nogueira, Enrique
    Gonzalez-Quiros, Rafael
    LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 2017, 62 (04) : 1355 - 1365
  • [40] Effects of inter-specific variability on biomass allocation: A hierarchical Bayesian approach
    Wang, You-Shi
    Chu, Cheng-Jin
    Zhu, Kai
    Shen, Ze-Hao
    ECOLOGICAL INFORMATICS, 2011, 6 (06) : 341 - 344