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Power laws and plant trait variation in spatio-temporally heterogeneous environments
Authors:Catherine M Hulshof  María Natalia Umaña
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, USA;2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Abstract:

A challenge

Variation is ubiquitous in nature across all spatial and temporal scales and underlies prominent ecological and evolutionary theories. Although understanding the causes and consequences of trait variation is a central goal of trait-based ecology, the scaling of trait variance across space and time (variance scaling) is unresolved.

A solution

We argue that characterizing trait variance across spatio-temporal scales using a combination of prominent power laws can elucidate the role of environmental variability in trait variation and potential mechanisms driving trait patterns. In particular, the species–time–area relationship and Taylor's power law help to establish a generalizable framework for developing and testing variance scaling theory. Finally, we outline priority research questions and tractable systems for answering them. Successional forests, long-term forest monitoring networks and censuses of short-lived taxa are ideal for coupling high-resolution environmental data with measurements of trait variance across scales to test the models proposed here.

Main conclusions

Characterizing the behaviour of variance across spatio-temporal scales is feasible and a prerequisite for developing a predictive theory of trait-based ecology.
Keywords:climatic variability  community assembly  environmental heterogeneity  functional ecology  species–area relationship  Taylor's power law  trait-based variance
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