Intraspecific Variation and Species Coexistence

Abstract: We use a two‐species model of plant competition to explore the effect of intraspecific variation on community dynamics. The competitive ability ("performance") of each individual is assigned by an independent random draw from a species‐specific probability distribution. If the de...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American Naturalist. - University of Chicago Press. - 170(2007), 6, Seite 807-818
1. Verfasser: Lichstein, Jeremy W. (VerfasserIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Dushoff, Jonathan, Levin, Simon A., Pacala, Stephen W.
Format: Online-Aufsatz
Veröffentlicht: 2007
Zugriff auf das übergeordnete Werk:The American Naturalist
Schlagworte:coexistence competition drift individual variation neutral theory trade‐off Biological sciences Social sciences Mathematics Jeremy W.
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Abstract: We use a two‐species model of plant competition to explore the effect of intraspecific variation on community dynamics. The competitive ability ("performance") of each individual is assigned by an independent random draw from a species‐specific probability distribution. If the density of individuals competing for open space is high (e.g., because fecundity is high), species with high maximum (or large variance in) performance are favored, while if density is low, species with high typical (e.g., mean) performance are favored. If there is an interspecific mean‐variance performance trade‐off, stable coexistence can occur across a limited range of intermediate densities, but the stabilizing effect of this trade‐off appears to be weak. In the absence of this trade‐off, one species is superior. In this case, intraspecific variation can blur interspecific differences (i.e., shift the dynamics toward what would be expected in the neutral case), but the strength of this effect diminishes as competitor density increases. If density is sufficiently high, the inferior species is driven to extinction just as rapidly as in the case where there is no overlap in performance between species. Intraspecific variation can facilitate coexistence, but this may be relatively unimportant in maintaining diversity in most real communities.
Beschreibung:Online enhancements: appendixes. * E‐mail: jwlprinceton.edu . † E‐mail: dushoff@eno.princeton.edu . ‡ E‐mail: slevin@eno.princeton.edu . § E‐mail: pacala@princeton.edu .
ISSN:15375323
DOI:10.1086/522937