SPECIES INTERACTIONS, LOCAL AND REGIONAL PROCESSES, AND LIMITS TO THE RICHNESS OF ECOLOGICAL COMMUNITIES - A THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE

被引:824
|
作者
CORNELL, HV [1 ]
LAWTON, JH [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV LONDON IMPERIAL COLL SCI & TECHNOL,NERC,CTR POPULAT BIOL,ASCOT SL5 7PY,BERKS,ENGLAND
关键词
SPECIES RICHNESS; ECOLOGICAL COMMUNITY; SATURATION; LOCAL RICHNESS; REGIONAL RICHNESS; COMMUNITY CLASSIFICATION;
D O I
10.2307/5503
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
1. Are local ecological communities ever saturated with species? That is, do they ever reach a point where species from the regional pool are unable to invade the local habitat because of exclusion by resident species? 2. We review the theoretical evidence for saturation in various community models and find that non-interactive models predict the absence of saturation as expected, but that interactive models do not uniformly predict saturation. 3. Instead, models where coexistence is based on niche space heterogeneity predict saturation, whereas those where coexistence is based upon spatial heterogeneity yield mixed predictions. 4. Thus, theory says that species interactions are a necessary but not sufficient condition for local saturation in ecological time. 5. We then argue that unsaturated (Type I) assemblages are likely to be ubiquitous in nature and that even saturated (Type II) assemblages may not show hard limits to richness over evolutionary time-scales. 6. If local richness is not often saturated, then regional richness is freed from local constraint, and other limits on regional richness (which, in turn, limit local richness) become important, including phylogenetic diversification over evolutionary time-scales. 7. Our speculations inevitably suggest that the principal direction of control for species richness is from regional to local. If correct, then the key to community structure may lie in extrinsic biogeography rather than in intrinsic local processes, making community ecology a more historical science.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 12
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] On the relationship between regional and local species richness: A test of saturation theory
    Starzomski, Brian M.
    Parker, Raenelle L.
    Srivastava, Diane S.
    ECOLOGY, 2008, 89 (07) : 1921 - 1930
  • [42] Global, regional, and local patterns in species richness and abundance of butterflyfishes: Comment
    Karlson, RH
    ECOLOGY, 2002, 83 (02) : 583 - 585
  • [43] Regional and local species richness in an insular environment: Serpentine plants in California
    Harrison, S
    Safford, HD
    Grace, JB
    Viers, JH
    Davies, KF
    ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 2006, 76 (01) : 41 - 56
  • [44] The Combined Influence of the Local Environment and Regional Enrichment on Bird Species Richness
    White, Ethan P.
    Hurlbert, Allen H.
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2010, 175 (02): : E35 - E43
  • [45] Community assembly time and the relationship between local and regional species richness
    Mouquet, N
    Munguia, P
    Kneitel, JM
    Miller, TE
    OIKOS, 2003, 103 (03) : 618 - 626
  • [46] Regional and local patterns in plant species richness with respect to resource availability
    Cornwell, WK
    Grubb, PJ
    OIKOS, 2003, 100 (03) : 417 - 428
  • [47] Effects of competition, predation, and dispersal on species richness at local and regional scales
    Shurin, JB
    Allen, EG
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2001, 158 (06): : 624 - 637
  • [48] THE CAUSES OF SPECIES RICHNESS PATTERNS ACROSS SPACE, TIME, AND CLADES AND THE ROLE OF "ECOLOGICAL LIMITS"
    Wiens, John J.
    QUARTERLY REVIEW OF BIOLOGY, 2011, 86 (02): : 75 - 96
  • [49] Environmental changes define ecological limits to species richness and reveal the mode of macroevolutionary competition
    Ezard, Thomas H. G.
    Purvis, Andy
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2016, 19 (08) : 899 - 906
  • [50] An approach based on the total-species accumulation curve and higher taxon richness to estimate realistic upper limits in regional species richness
    Bevilacqua, Stanislao
    Ugland, Karl Inne
    Plicanti, Adriana
    Scuderi, Danilo
    Terlizzi, Antonio
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2018, 8 (01): : 405 - 415