Fibich Pavel, Novotný Vojtěch, Ediriweera Sisira, Gunatilleke Savitri, Gunatilleke Nimal, Molem Kenneth, Weiblen George D, Lepš Jan
Faculty of Science University of South Bohemia České Budějovice Czech Republic.
Biology Centre CAS Institute of Entomology České Budějovice Czech Republic.
Ecol Evol. 2021 May 27;11(12):8085-8095. doi: 10.1002/ece3.7640. eCollection 2021 Jun.
Tropical forests are notable for their high species diversity, even on small spatial scales, and right-skewed species and size abundance distributions. The role of individual species as drivers of the spatial organization of diversity in these forests has been explained by several hypotheses and processes, for example, stochastic dilution, negative density dependence, or gap dynamics. These processes leave a signature in spatial distribution of small trees, particularly in the vicinity of large trees, likely having stronger effects on their neighbors. We are exploring species diversity patterns within the framework of various diversity-generating hypotheses using individual species-area relationships. We used the data from three tropical forest plots (Wanang-Papua New Guinea, Barro Colorado Island-Panama, and Sinharaja-Sri Lanka) and included also the saplings (DBH ≥ 1 cm). Resulting cross-size patterns of species richness and evenness reflect the dynamics of saplings affected by the distribution of large trees. When all individuals with DBH ≥1 cm are included, ~50% of all tree species from the 25- or 50-ha plot can be found within 35 m radius of an individual tree. For all trees, 72%-78% of species were identified as species richness accumulators, having more species present in their surroundings than expected by null models. This pattern was driven by small trees as the analysis of DBH >10 cm trees showed much lower proportion of accumulators, 14%-65% of species identified as richness repellers and had low richness of surrounding small trees. Only 11%-26% of species had lower species evenness than was expected by null models. High proportions of species richness accumulators were probably due to gap dynamics and support Janzen-Connell hypothesis driven by competition or top-down control by pathogens and herbivores. Observed species diversity patterns show the importance of including small tree size classes in analyses of the spatial organization of diversity.
热带森林以其高度的物种多样性而闻名,即使在小空间尺度上也是如此,并且具有右偏的物种和大小丰度分布。单个物种作为这些森林中多样性空间组织驱动因素的作用已通过多种假设和过程得到解释,例如随机稀释、负密度依赖或林窗动态。这些过程在小树的空间分布中留下了印记,特别是在大树附近,可能对其邻居产生更强的影响。我们正在使用单个物种 - 面积关系,在各种多样性生成假设的框架内探索物种多样性模式。我们使用了来自三个热带森林样地(万昂 - 巴布亚新几内亚、巴罗科罗拉多岛 - 巴拿马和辛哈拉贾 - 斯里兰卡)的数据,并且还纳入了幼树(胸径≥1厘米)。由此产生的物种丰富度和均匀度的跨大小模式反映了受大树分布影响的幼树动态。当纳入所有胸径≥1厘米的个体时,在25公顷或50公顷样地中,约50%的所有树种可以在一棵个体树的35米半径范围内找到。对于所有树木,72% - 78%的物种被确定为物种丰富度积累者,其周围存在的物种比空模型预期的更多。这种模式是由小树驱动的,因为对胸径>10厘米树木的分析显示积累者的比例要低得多,14% - 65%的物种被确定为丰富度排斥者,并且其周围小树的丰富度较低。只有11% - 26%的物种的均匀度低于空模型预期。物种丰富度积累者的高比例可能归因于林窗动态,并支持由竞争或病原体和食草动物的自上而下控制驱动的简森 - 康奈尔假说。观察到的物种多样性模式表明在多样性空间组织分析中纳入小树大小类别的重要性。