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Species colonisation, not competitive exclusion, drives community overdispersion over long-term succession

  • Shao peng Li
  • , Marc W. Cadotte*
  • , Scott J. Meiners
  • , Zheng shuang Hua
  • , Lin Jiang
  • , Wen sheng Shu
  • *此作品的通讯作者
  • Sun Yat-Sen University
  • University of Toronto
  • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Eastern Illinois University

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

摘要

Ecological communities often transition from phylogenetic and functional clustering to overdispersion over succession as judged by space-for-time substitution studies. Such a pattern has been generally attributed to the increase in competitive exclusion of closely related species with similar traits through time, although colonisation and extinction have rarely been examined. Using 44 years of uninterrupted old-field succession in New Jersey, USA, we confirmed that phylogenetic and functional clustering decreased as succession unfolded, but the transition was largely driven by colonisation. Early colonists were closely related and functionally similar to residents, while later colonists became less similar to the species present. Extirpated species were generally more distantly related to residents than by chance, or exhibited random phylogenetic/functional patterns, and their relatedness to residents was not associated with time. These results provide direct evidence that the colonisation of distant relatives, rather than extinction of close relatives, drives phylogenetic and functional overdispersion over succession.

源语言英语
页(从-至)964-973
页数10
期刊Ecology Letters
18
9
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 1 9月 2015
已对外发布

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