Department of Geography, National University of Singapore, Arts Link, #03-01 Block AS2, 117570, Singapore.
Yale-NUS College, 16 College Avenue West, Singapore, 138527, Singapore.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2024 Jun;99(3):928-949. doi: 10.1111/brv.13051. Epub 2024 Jan 16.
The core principle shared by most theories and models of succession is that, following a major disturbance, plant-environment feedback dynamics drive a directional change in the plant community. The most commonly studied feedback loops are those in which the regrowth of the plant community causes changes to the abiotic (e.g. soil nutrients) or biotic (e.g. dispersers) environment, which differentially affect species availability or performance. This, in turn, leads to shifts in the species composition of the plant community. However, there are many other PE feedback loops that potentially drive succession, each of which can be considered a model of succession. While plant-environment feedback loops in principle generate predictable successional trajectories, succession is generally observed to be highly variable. Factors contributing to this variability are the stochastic processes involved in feedback dynamics, such as individual mortality and seed dispersal, and extrinsic causes of succession, which are not affected by changes in the plant community but do affect species performance or availability. Both can lead to variation in the identity of dominant species within communities. This, in turn, leads to further contingencies if these species differ in their effect on their environment (priority effects). Predictability and variability are thus intrinsically linked features of ecological succession. We present a new conceptual framework of ecological succession that integrates the propositions discussed above. This framework defines seven general causes: landscape context, disturbance and land-use, biotic factors, abiotic factors, species availability, species performance, and the plant community. When involved in a feedback loop, these general causes drive succession and when not, they are extrinsic causes that create variability in successional trajectories and dynamics. The proposed framework provides a guide for linking these general causes into causal pathways that represent specific models of succession. Our framework represents a systematic approach to identifying the main feedback processes and causes of variation at different successional stages. It can be used for systematic comparisons among study sites and along environmental gradients, to conceptualise studies, and to guide the formulation of research questions and design of field studies. Mapping an extensive field study onto our conceptual framework revealed that the pathways representing the study's empirical outcomes and conceptual model had important differences, underlining the need to move beyond the conceptual models that currently dominate in specific fields and to find ways to examine the importance of and interactions among alternative causal pathways of succession. To further this aim, we argue for integrating long-term studies across environmental and anthropogenic gradients, combined with controlled experiments and dynamic modelling.
大多数演替理论和模型的核心原则是,在重大干扰后,植物-环境反馈动态驱动植物群落发生方向性变化。最常研究的反馈回路是那些植物群落的再生导致非生物(例如土壤养分)或生物(例如传播者)环境发生变化的反馈回路,这些变化会对物种的可用性或表现产生差异影响。这反过来又导致植物群落的物种组成发生变化。然而,还有许多其他潜在的驱动演替的 PE 反馈回路,每一个都可以被视为一种演替模型。虽然植物-环境反馈回路原则上会产生可预测的演替轨迹,但演替通常被观察到具有高度的可变性。导致这种可变性的因素是反馈动态中涉及的随机过程,例如个体死亡率和种子传播,以及不受植物群落变化影响但确实影响物种表现或可用性的演替的外在原因。两者都可能导致群落中优势物种的身份发生变化。如果这些物种对其环境的影响不同(优先效应),这反过来又会导致进一步的偶然性。因此,可预测性和可变性是生态演替固有的特征。我们提出了一个新的生态演替概念框架,该框架整合了上述讨论的命题。该框架定义了七个一般原因:景观背景、干扰和土地利用、生物因素、非生物因素、物种可用性、物种表现和植物群落。当涉及反馈回路时,这些一般原因会驱动演替,而当不涉及时,它们是造成演替轨迹和动态变化的外在原因。所提出的框架为将这些一般原因纳入代表特定演替模型的因果途径提供了指导。我们的框架提供了一种系统的方法,可以确定不同演替阶段的主要反馈过程和变化原因。它可用于在研究地点和环境梯度之间进行系统比较,概念化研究,并指导研究问题的提出和野外研究的设计。将一项广泛的实地研究映射到我们的概念框架上,揭示了代表该研究经验结果和概念模型的途径存在重要差异,这强调了需要超越当前在特定领域占主导地位的概念模型,并找到检验演替替代因果途径的重要性和相互作用的方法。为了进一步实现这一目标,我们主张在环境和人为梯度上进行长期研究,同时结合控制实验和动态建模。