Stochastic species turnover and stable coexistence in a species-rich, fire-prone plant community.

Understanding the mechanisms that maintain diversity is important for managing ecosystems for species persistence. Here we used a long-term data set to understand mechanisms of coexistence at the local and regional scales in the Cape Floristic Region, a global hotspot of plant diversity. We used a d...

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Main Authors: Wilfried Thuiller, Jasper A Slingsby, Sean D J Privett, Richard M Cowling
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-09-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1976552?pdf=render
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author Wilfried Thuiller
Jasper A Slingsby
Sean D J Privett
Richard M Cowling
author_facet Wilfried Thuiller
Jasper A Slingsby
Sean D J Privett
Richard M Cowling
author_sort Wilfried Thuiller
collection DOAJ
description Understanding the mechanisms that maintain diversity is important for managing ecosystems for species persistence. Here we used a long-term data set to understand mechanisms of coexistence at the local and regional scales in the Cape Floristic Region, a global hotspot of plant diversity. We used a dataset comprising 81 monitoring sites, sampled in 1966 and again in 1996, and containing 422 species for which growth form, regeneration mode, dispersal distance and abundances at both the local (site) and meta-community scales are known. We found that species presence and abundance were stable at the meta-community scale over the 30 year period but highly unstable at the local scale, and were not influenced by species' biological attributes. Moreover, rare species were no more likely to go extinct at the local scale than common species, and that alpha diversity in local communities was strongly influenced by habitat. We conclude that stochastic environmental fluctuations associated with recurrent fire buffer populations from extinction, thereby ensuring stable coexistence at the meta-community scale by creating a "neutral-like" pattern maintained by niche-differentiation.
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spelling doaj.art-b652c7b0d1464bad848ef274bf3d94d42022-12-21T18:29:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032007-09-0129e93810.1371/journal.pone.0000938Stochastic species turnover and stable coexistence in a species-rich, fire-prone plant community.Wilfried ThuillerJasper A SlingsbySean D J PrivettRichard M CowlingUnderstanding the mechanisms that maintain diversity is important for managing ecosystems for species persistence. Here we used a long-term data set to understand mechanisms of coexistence at the local and regional scales in the Cape Floristic Region, a global hotspot of plant diversity. We used a dataset comprising 81 monitoring sites, sampled in 1966 and again in 1996, and containing 422 species for which growth form, regeneration mode, dispersal distance and abundances at both the local (site) and meta-community scales are known. We found that species presence and abundance were stable at the meta-community scale over the 30 year period but highly unstable at the local scale, and were not influenced by species' biological attributes. Moreover, rare species were no more likely to go extinct at the local scale than common species, and that alpha diversity in local communities was strongly influenced by habitat. We conclude that stochastic environmental fluctuations associated with recurrent fire buffer populations from extinction, thereby ensuring stable coexistence at the meta-community scale by creating a "neutral-like" pattern maintained by niche-differentiation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1976552?pdf=render
spellingShingle Wilfried Thuiller
Jasper A Slingsby
Sean D J Privett
Richard M Cowling
Stochastic species turnover and stable coexistence in a species-rich, fire-prone plant community.
PLoS ONE
title Stochastic species turnover and stable coexistence in a species-rich, fire-prone plant community.
title_full Stochastic species turnover and stable coexistence in a species-rich, fire-prone plant community.
title_fullStr Stochastic species turnover and stable coexistence in a species-rich, fire-prone plant community.
title_full_unstemmed Stochastic species turnover and stable coexistence in a species-rich, fire-prone plant community.
title_short Stochastic species turnover and stable coexistence in a species-rich, fire-prone plant community.
title_sort stochastic species turnover and stable coexistence in a species rich fire prone plant community
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1976552?pdf=render
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