A new paper from our global dryland database has just been accepted. It results from a collaboration with Prof. Werner Ulrich from Nicolaus Copernicus University. It will be
published online early during the next weeks/months, but here go the abstracts:
Ulrich, W., S. Soliveres, A. Thomas, A. Dougill
& F. T. Maestre. 2016. Environmental
correlates of species rank – abundance distributions in global drylands. Perspectives
in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics
Theoretical
models predict lognormal species abundance distributions (SADs) in stable and
productive environments, with log-series SADs in less stable, dispersal driven
communities. We studied patterns of relative species abundances of perennial
vascular plants in global dryland communities to: i) assess the influence of
climatic and soil characteristics on the observed SADs, ii) infer how
environmental variability influences relative abundances, and iii) evaluate how
colonisation dynamics and environmental filters shape abundance distributions. We
fitted lognormal and log-series SADs to 91 sites containing at least 15 species
of perennial vascular plants. The dependence of species relative abundances on soil
and climate variables was assessed using general linear models. Irrespective of
habitat type and latitude, the majority of the SADs (70.3%) were best described
by a lognormal distribution. Lognormal SADs were associated with low annual
precipitation, higher aridity, high soil carbon content, and higher variability
of climate variables and soil nitrate. Our results do not corroborate models predicting
the prevalence of log-series SADs in dryland communities. As lognormal SADs
were particularly associated with sites with drier conditions and a higher
environmental variability, we reject models linking lognormality to environmental
stability and high productivity conditions. Instead our results point to the
prevalence of lognormal SADs in heterogeneous environments, allowing for more
even plant communities or in stressful ecosystems, which are generally shaped
by strong habitat filters and limited colonisation. This suggests that drylands
may be resilient to environmental changes because the many species with
intermediate relative abundances could take over ecosystem functioning if the
environment becomes suboptimal for dominant species.
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