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Ontogenetic trait variation and metacommunity effects influence species relative abundances during tree community assembly
Authors:Yun-Yun He  Kwansupa Srisombut  Ding-Liang Xing  Nanthan G. Swenson  Mengesha Asefa  Min Cao  Xiao-Yang Song  Han-Dong Wen  Jie Yang
Abstract:Predicting species abundance is one of the most fundamental pursuits of ecology. Combining the information encoded in functional traits and metacommunities provides a new perspective to predict the abundance of species in communities. We applied a community assembly via trait selection model to predict quadrat-scale species abundances using functional trait variation on ontogenetic stages and metacommunity information for over 490 plant species in a subtropical forest and a lowland tropical forest in Yunnan, China. The relative importance of trait-based selection, mass effects, and stochasticity in shaping local species abundances is evaluated using different null models. We found both mass effects and trait selection contribute to local abundance patterns. Trait selection was detectable at all studied spatial scales (0.04–1 ha), with its strength stronger at larger scales and in the subtropical forest. In contrast, the importance of stochasticity decreased with spatial scale. A significant mass effect of the metacommunity was observed at small spatial scales. Our results indicate that tree community assembly is primarily driven by ontogenetic traits and metacommunity effects. Our findings also demonstrate that including ontogenetic trait variation into predictive frameworks allows ecologists to infer ecological mechanisms operating in community assembly at the individual level.
Keywords:Metacommunity   Maximum entropy   Ontogenetic trait variation   Community assembly   Trait-selected process
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