Wright Joseph S
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado 2072, Balboa, Ancón, Republic of Panama.
Oecologia. 2002 Jan;130(1):1-14. doi: 10.1007/s004420100809. Epub 2002 Jan 1.
Evidence concerning mechanisms hypothesized to explain species coexistence in hyper-diverse communities is reviewed for tropical forest plants. Three hypotheses receive strong support. Niche differences are evident from non-random spatial distributions along micro-topographic gradients and from a survivorship-growth tradeoff during regeneration. Host-specific pests reduce recruitment near reproductive adults (the Janzen-Connell effect), and, negative density dependence occurs over larger spatial scales among the more abundant species and may regulate their populations. A fourth hypothesis, that suppressed understory plants rarely come into competition with one another, has not been considered before and has profound implications for species coexistence. These hypotheses are mutually compatible. Infrequent competition among suppressed understory plants, niche differences, and Janzen-Connell effects may facilitate the coexistence of the many rare plant species found in tropical forests while negative density dependence regulates the few most successful and abundant species.
针对热带森林植物,综述了关于假定用于解释超多样化群落中物种共存机制的证据。有三个假说得到了有力支持。生态位差异从沿微地形梯度的非随机空间分布以及再生过程中的生存-生长权衡中明显可见。寄主特异性害虫减少了生殖成年个体附近的补充(简森-康奈尔效应),并且在更丰富的物种之间,负密度依赖在更大空间尺度上发生,可能调节它们的种群数量。第四个假说,即受抑制的林下植物很少相互竞争,以前从未被考虑过,并且对物种共存具有深远影响。这些假说相互兼容。受抑制的林下植物之间的罕见竞争、生态位差异和简森-康奈尔效应可能促进了热带森林中发现的许多稀有植物物种的共存,而负密度依赖则调节了少数最成功和最丰富的物种。