Mack Keenan M L, Bever James D
Department of Biology, Indiana University, 1001 East Third Street, Bloomington, IN 47405.
J Ecol. 2014 Sep;102(5):1195-1201. doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.12269.
Negative plant-soil feedback occurs when the presence of an individual of a particular species at a particular site decreases the relative success of individuals of the same species compared to those other species at that site. This effect favors heterospecifics thereby facilitating coexistence and maintaining diversity. Empirical work has demonstrated that the average strengths of these feedbacks correlate with the relative abundance of species within a community, suggesting that feedbacks are an important driver of plant community composition. Understanding what factors contribute to the generation of this relationship is necessary for diagnosing the dynamic forces that maintain diversity in plant communities. We used a spatially explicit, individual-based computer simulation to test the effects of dispersal distance, the size of feedback neighbourhoods, the strength of pairwise feedbacks and community wide variation of feedbacks, community richness, as well as life-history differences on the dependence of relative abundance on strength of feedback. We found a positive dependence of relative abundance of a species on its average feedback for local scale dispersal and feedback. However, we found that the strength of this dependence decreased as either the spatial scale of dispersal and/or the spatial scale of feedback increased. We also found that for spatially local (i.e. relatively small) scale interaction and dispersal, as the mean strength of feedbacks in the community becomes less negative, the greater the increase in abundance produced by a comparable increase in species-specific average feedback. We found that life-history differences such as mortality rate did not generate a pattern with abundance, nor did they affect the relationship between abundance and average feedback. . Our results support the claim that empirical observations of a positive correlation between relative abundance and strength of average feedback serves as evidence that local scale negative feedbacks play a prominent role in structuring plant communities. We also identify that this relationship depends upon local scale plant dispersal and feedback which generates clumping and magnifies the negative feedbacks.
当特定物种的个体出现在特定地点时,相较于该地点的其他物种,同一物种个体的相对适合度降低,此时就会发生负的植物-土壤反馈。这种效应有利于异种植物,从而促进共存并维持多样性。实证研究表明,这些反馈的平均强度与群落内物种的相对丰度相关,这表明反馈是植物群落组成的重要驱动因素。了解哪些因素促成了这种关系,对于诊断维持植物群落多样性的动态力量至关重要。我们使用了一个空间明确、基于个体的计算机模拟,来测试扩散距离、反馈邻域大小、成对反馈强度、群落范围内反馈的变化、群落丰富度以及生活史差异对相对丰度对反馈强度依赖性的影响。我们发现,对于局部尺度的扩散和反馈,一个物种的相对丰度对其平均反馈呈正相关。然而,我们发现,随着扩散的空间尺度和/或反馈的空间尺度增加,这种依赖性的强度会降低。我们还发现,对于空间局部(即相对较小)尺度的相互作用和扩散,随着群落中反馈的平均强度变得不那么负,物种特异性平均反馈的可比增加所产生的丰度增加就越大。我们发现,诸如死亡率等生活史差异并没有产生与丰度相关的模式,也没有影响丰度与平均反馈之间的关系。我们的结果支持了这样的观点,即相对丰度与平均反馈强度之间正相关的实证观察结果,证明了局部尺度的负反馈在构建植物群落中起着重要作用。我们还确定,这种关系取决于局部尺度的植物扩散和反馈,这会产生聚集并放大负反馈。