Department of Biology, University of Washington, Box 351800, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA.
Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution for Science, 260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2019 May;22(5):787-796. doi: 10.1111/ele.13236. Epub 2019 Feb 21.
Species often respond to human-caused climate change by shifting where they occur on the landscape. To anticipate these shifts, we need to understand the forces that determine where species currently occur. We tested whether a long-hypothesised trade-off between climate and competitive constraints explains where tree species grow on mountain slopes. Using tree rings, we reconstructed growth sensitivity to climate and competition in range centre and range margin tree populations in three climatically distinct regions. We found that climate often constrains growth at environmentally harsh elevational range boundaries, and that climatic and competitive constraints trade-off at large spatial scales. However, there was less evidence that competition consistently constrained growth at benign elevational range boundaries; thus, local-scale climate-competition trade-offs were infrequent. Our work underscores the difficulty of predicting local-scale range dynamics, but suggests that the constraints on tree performance at a large-scale (e.g. latitudinal) may be predicted from ecological theory.
物种通常通过改变其在景观中的出现位置来应对人为引起的气候变化。为了预测这些变化,我们需要了解决定物种当前存在位置的力量。我们测试了气候和竞争约束之间长期假设的权衡是否可以解释树种在山坡上的生长位置。我们使用树木年轮,在三个气候明显不同的地区,重建了范围中心和范围边缘树种种群对气候和竞争的生长敏感性。我们发现,气候通常在环境恶劣的海拔范围边界限制生长,并且在大的空间尺度上,气候和竞争约束相互权衡。然而,几乎没有证据表明竞争总是在良性海拔范围边界限制生长,因此,局部尺度上的气候-竞争权衡并不常见。我们的工作强调了预测局部尺度范围动态的困难,但表明可以从生态理论预测大尺度(例如,纬度)上树木表现的限制。