Wiegand Thorsten, Gunatilleke Savitri, Gunatilleke Nimal, Okuda Toshinori
UFZ Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research-Umweltforschungszentrum, Department of Ecological Modeling, PF 500136, D-04301 Leipzig, Germany.
Ecology. 2007 Dec;88(12):3088-102. doi: 10.1890/06-1350.1.
Clustering at multiple critical scales may be common for plants since many different factors and processes may cause clustering. This is especially true for tropical rain forests for which theories explaining species coexistence and community structure rest heavily on spatial patterns. We used point pattern analysis to analyze the spatial structure of Shorea congestiflora, a dominant species in a 25-ha forest dynamics plot in a rain forest at Sinharaja World Heritage Site (Sri Lanka), which apparently shows clustering at several scales. We developed cluster processes incorporating two critical scales of clustering for exploring the spatial structure of S. congestiflora and interpret it in relation to factors such as competition, dispersal limitation, recruitment limitation, and Janzen-Connell effects. All size classes showed consistent large-scale clustering with a cluster radius of approximately 25 m. Inside the larger clusters, small-scale clusters with a radius of 8 m were evident for recruits and saplings, weak for intermediates, and disappeared for adults. The pattern of all trees could be divided into two independent patterns: a random pattern (nearest neighbor distance > 8 m) comprising approximately 12% of the trees and a nested double-cluster pattern. This finding suggests two independent recruitment and/or seed dispersal mechanisms. Saplings were several times as abundant as recruits and may accumulate several recruit generations. Recruits were only weakly associated with adults and occupied about half of the large-scale clusters, but saplings almost all. This is consistent with recruitment limitation. For approximately 70% (95%) of all juveniles the nearest adult was less than 26 m away (53 m), suggesting a dispersal limitation that may also be related to the critical large-scale clustering. Our example illustrates the manner in which the use of a specific and complex null hypothesis of spatial structure in point pattern analysis can help us better understand the biology of a species and generate specific hypotheses to be further investigated in the field.
由于许多不同的因素和过程可能导致聚集,因此在多个临界尺度上的聚集对于植物来说可能很常见。对于热带雨林来说尤其如此,解释物种共存和群落结构的理论在很大程度上依赖于空间格局。我们使用点格局分析来分析密集龙脑香(Shorea congestiflora)的空间结构,密集龙脑香是斯里兰卡辛哈拉贾世界遗产地雨林中一个25公顷森林动态样地中的优势物种,它显然在多个尺度上表现出聚集。我们开发了包含两个聚集临界尺度的聚集过程,以探索密集龙脑香的空间结构,并将其与竞争、扩散限制、补充限制和简森 - 康奈尔效应等因素联系起来进行解释。所有大小级别的个体都表现出一致的大规模聚集,聚集半径约为25米。在较大的聚集体内部,对于幼苗和幼树来说,半径为8米的小规模聚集体很明显,对于中等大小个体则较弱,对于成年个体则消失。所有树木的格局可分为两种独立的格局:一种随机格局(最近邻距离>8米),约占树木总数的12%,以及一种嵌套的双聚集体格局。这一发现表明存在两种独立的补充和/或种子扩散机制。幼树的数量是幼苗的几倍,可能积累了几代幼苗。幼苗与成年个体的关联较弱,占据了约一半的大规模聚集体,但几乎所有的幼树都在大规模聚集体中。这与补充限制是一致的。对于所有幼树中约70%(95%)来说,最近的成年个体距离小于26米(53米),这表明存在扩散限制,这也可能与临界大规模聚集有关。我们的例子说明了在点格局分析中使用特定且复杂的空间结构零假设的方式如何能够帮助我们更好地理解一个物种的生物学特性,并产生有待在实地进一步研究的特定假设。