4.8 Article

When can we distinguish between neutral and non-neutral processes in community dynamics under ecological drift?

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages 909-919

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01346.x

Keywords

Bray & Curtis; community composition; dispersal; ecological similarity; metacommunity; neutral model; percent similarity

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Determining whether the composition of ecological communities (species presence and abundance), can be predicted from species demographic traits, rather than being a result of neutral drift, is a key ecological question. Here we compare the similarity of community composition, from different community assembly models run under identical environmental conditions, where interspecific competition is assumed to be either neutral or niche-based. In both cases, species colonize a focal patch from a network of neighbouring patches in a metacommunity. We highlight the circumstances (rate and spatial scale of dispersal, and the relative importance of ecological drift) where commonly used community similarity metrics or species rank-abundance relationships are likely to give similar results, regardless of the underlying processes (neutral or non-neural) driving species' dynamics. As drift becomes more important in driving species abundances, deterministic niche structure has a smaller influence. Our ability to discriminate between different underlying processes driving community organization depends on the relative importance of different drift processes that operate on different spatial scales.

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