4.6 Article

Effects of abiotic heterogeneity on species densities and interaction strengths lead to different spatial biodiversity patterns

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2023.1071375

Keywords

density dependence; interaction strength; environmental filtering; fundamental and realized niche; interspecific competition; heterogeneity-diversity relationship (HDR); abiotic landscape; plant community ecology

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During community assembly, abiotic factors can influence species at different stages of their life history, either by affecting initial densities or by affecting the strength of biotic interactions. The combined effects of variable density and variable interaction strengths on community patterns are non-additive, leading to different spatial structures and local species richness.
During community assembly, abiotic factors can influence species at multiple stages during their life history, for example by affecting early settlement or establishment probabilities and thus initial densities (route 1: abiotic effects on density), or later by affecting the strength of biotic interactions during subsequent life stages (route 2: abiotic effects on interaction strengths). Since real abiotic landscapes are multivariate and complex, how these two distinct routes of abiotic influence affect community patterns has not been quantified. Using an individual-based spatially explicit simulation model, we compared scenarios where abiotic conditions shaped initial densities, interaction strengths, or both, of plant species with unique abiotic niches. We then partitioned the effect of the abiotic landscape on community patterns into components arising from variable density, variable interaction strengths, and their interaction. Even when plants responded to identical landscapes, variable density and variable interaction strengths led to different community patterns, and their combined effects were non-additive. Variable density promoted more spatial structure, while variable interaction strengths promoted higher local species richness. We highlight important implications these findings have in applied plant community ecology.

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