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Local‐scale biotic interactions embedded in macroscale climate drivers suggest Eltonian noise hypothesis distribution patterns for an invasive grass
Authors:Jennifer M Fraterrigo  Stephanie Wagner  Robert J Warren
Institution:1. Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois, , Urbana, IL, 61801 USA;2. Department of Biology, SUNY Buffalo State, , Buffalo, NY, 14222 USA
Abstract:A hierarchical view of niche relations reconciles the scale‐dependent effects of abiotic and biotic processes on species distribution patterns and underlies most current approaches to distribution modeling. A key prediction of this framework is that the effects of biotic interactions will be averaged out at macroscales – an idea termed the Eltonian noise hypothesis (ENH). We test this prediction by quantifying regional variation in local abiotic and biotic niche relations and assess the role of macroclimate in structuring biotic interactions, using a non‐native invasive grass, Microstegium vimineum, in its introduced range. Consistent with hierarchical niche relations and the ENH, macroclimate structures local biotic interactions, while local abiotic relations are regionally conserved. Biotic interactions suppress M. vimineum in drier climates but have little effect in wetter climates. A similar approach could be used to identify the macroclimatic conditions under which biotic interactions affect the accuracy of local predictions of species distributions.
Keywords:Biotic effects  competition  facilitation  hierarchical Bayesian models  macroclimate  niche theory  spatial scale  species distribution modeling
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