Center for Population Biology, University of California Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, California 95616, USA.
Ecology. 2011 May;92(5):1094-103. doi: 10.1890/10-1332.1.
For sessile organisms, dispersal and recruitment are typically spatially stochastic, but there is little understanding of how this variability scales up to influence processes such as competitive coexistence. Here we argue that coexistence of benthic marine animals is enhanced by stochastic differences between species in the spatial distribution of larval settlement. Differentiation of settlement distributions among competitors results in intraspecifically aggregated settlement, which can reduce overall interspecific competition and increase overall intraspecific competition. We test for the components of this mechanism using a pair of subtidal invertebrates, and we find that the mean interspecific effect of the dominant competitor is substantially reduced by natural settlement variability. Using a simulation parameterized with experimental data, we find that variable settlement could play an important role in long-term coexistence between these species. This mechanism may apply broadly to benthic marine communities, which can be highly diverse and typically exhibit large settlement fluctuation over a range of scales.
对于固着生物而言,扩散和繁殖通常是空间随机的,但人们对这种变异性如何扩大规模以影响竞争共存等过程知之甚少。在这里,我们认为,底栖海洋动物的共存是通过幼虫定殖空间分布的物种间随机差异增强的。竞争者之间定居分布的分化导致种内聚集定居,这可以减少种间竞争的总体水平,并增加种内竞争的总体水平。我们使用一对潮间带无脊椎动物来检验该机制的组成部分,我们发现,占优势的竞争者的种间平均效应因自然定居变异性而大大降低。使用一个用实验数据参数化的模拟,我们发现可变的定殖可能在这些物种之间的长期共存中发挥重要作用。这种机制可能广泛适用于底栖海洋群落,这些群落通常高度多样化,并且在一系列尺度上表现出较大的定居波动。