Latitudinal scaling of aggregation with abundance and coexistence in forests
丰度(生态学)
缩放比例
生态学
环境科学
生物
数学
几何学
作者
Thorsten Wiegand,Xugao Wang,Samuel Fischer,Nathan J. B. Kraft,Norman A. Bourg,Warren Y. Brockelman,Guanghong Cao,Min Cao,Wirong Chanthorn,Chengjin Chu,Stuart J. Davies,Sisira Ediriweera,C. V. S. Gunatilleke,I. A. U. N. Gunatilleke,Zhanqing Hao,Robert W. Howe,Mingxi Jiang,Guangze Jin,W. John Kress,Buhang Li
The search for simple principles that underlie the spatial structure and dynamics of plant communities is a long-standing challenge in ecology1–6. In particular, the relationship between species coexistence and the spatial distribution of plants is challenging to resolve in species-rich communities7–9. Here we present a comprehensive analysis of the spatial patterns of 720 tree species in 21 large forest plots and their consequences for species coexistence. We show that species with low abundance tend to be more spatially aggregated than more abundant species. Moreover, there is a latitudinal gradient in the strength of this negative aggregation–abundance relationship that increases from tropical to temperate forests. We suggest, in line with recent work10, that latitudinal gradients in animal seed dispersal11 and mycorrhizal associations12–14 may jointly generate this pattern. By integrating the observed spatial patterns into population models8, we derive the conditions under which species can invade from low abundance in terms of spatial patterns, demography, niche overlap and immigration. Evaluation of the spatial-invasion condition for the 720 tree species analysed suggests that temperate and tropical forests both meet the invasion criterion to a similar extent but through contrasting strategies conditioned by their spatial patterns. Our approach opens up new avenues for the integration of observed spatial patterns into ecological theory and underscores the need to understand the interaction among spatial patterns at the neighbourhood scale and multiple ecological processes in greater detail. A unified framework is presented that integrates observed spatial patterns of individual trees in forests with ecological processes into a novel coexistence theory.