COEXISTENCE, SATURATION AND INVASION RESISTANCE IN SIMULATED PLANT ASSEMBLAGES

Moore, J.L., Mouquet, N, Lawton J.H. and Loreau, M. (2001).

Oikos, 94, 303-314, doi:10.1034/j.1600-0706.2001.940211.x

Key message : Here, we simulate plant community assembly using four models that have different underlying coexistence mechanisms (and so differ in the amount of available niche space) and subject them to invasion. We created species richness gradients by comparing between models or by considering the output of a single model with different parameter values. We found that the relation between species richness and invasion resistance depends critically on the model considered and the cause of the species richness gradient. Overall, our results suggest that species richness does not necessarily correlate with saturation and is likely to be a poor predictor of invasion resistance. These results provide a possible explanation for the variety of outcomes reported in recent experimental and observational studies that examine the relationship between species richness and invasion resistance. We conclude that consideration of the processes regulating species richness is crucial for a successful understanding of invasion resistance along species richness gradients.

The effect of the initial size of the regional pool and changing the fecundity parameter (Fmn) on invasion resistance of the invader for the four different coexistence mechanisms. Invasion resistance is calculated as (1 – the proportion of successful invasions). Each point represents the average value of 50 simulations. Error bars of one standard error are smaller than the symbols and so have not been included.

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OTHER TOPICS: Aesthetics of Biodiversity, Biogeography, Macroecology & Ecophylogenetics, Experimental Evolution, Functional Biogeography, Functional Rarity, Nature for Future, Metacommunities, Metaecosystems, Reviews and Synthesis, Trophic Biogeography & Metaweb