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Benefits from living together? Clades whose species use similar habitats may persist as a result of eco-evolutionary feedbacks

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 213, Issue 1, Pages 66-82

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.14341

Keywords

assembly of present and fossil communities; competition; conservation biology; enemy pressure and mutualism of coexisting species; evolution and conservatism; hybridization; niche breadth

Categories

Funding

  1. CNRS ATIP
  2. French Polar Institute (IPEV) [136]
  3. Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation [PZ00P3-136651]
  5. Dutch Science Foundation (NWO Biodiversity Works)
  6. Synthesis Centre for Biodiversity Sciences (sDiv)

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Recent decades have seen declines of entire plant clades while other clades persist despite changing environments. We suggest that one reason why some clades persist is that species within these clades use similar habitats, because such similarity may increase the degree of co-occurrence of species within clades. Traditionally, co-occurrence among clade members has been suggested to be disadvantageous because of increased competition and enemy pressure. Here, we hypothesize that increased co-occurrence among clade members promotes mutualist exchange, niche expansion or hybridization, thereby helping species avoid population decline from environmental change. We review the literature and analyse published data for hundreds of plant clades (genera) within a well-studied region and find major differences in the degree to which species within clades occupy similar habitats. Wetentatively show that, in clades for which species occupy similar habitats, species tend to exhibit increased co-occurrence, mutualism, niche expansion, and hybridization - and rarely decline. Consistently, throughout the geological past, clades whose species occupied similar habitats often persisted through long time-spans. Overall, for many plant species, the occupation of similar habitats among fellow clade members apparently reduced their vulnerability to environmental change. Future research should identify when and how this previously unrecognized eco-evolutionary feedback operates.

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