Phylogenetic relatedness and the determinants of competitive outcomes

被引:270
作者
Godoy, Oscar [1 ]
Kraft, Nathan J. B. [2 ]
Levine, Jonathan M. [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Ecol Evolut & Marine Biol, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA
[2] Univ Maryland, Dept Biol, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
[3] ETH, Inst Integrat Biol, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Annual plants; California grasslands; coexistence; community assembly; competitive responses; demography; fitness; niches; trait conservatism; DARWINS NATURALIZATION CONUNDRUM; LIMITING SIMILARITY; PLANT-COMMUNITIES; INVASION SUCCESS; MAINTENANCE; COEXISTENCE; MECHANISMS; DIVERSITY; STRENGTH; ECOLOGY;
D O I
10.1111/ele.12289
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Recent hypotheses argue that phylogenetic relatedness should predict both the niche differences that stabilise coexistence and the average fitness differences that drive competitive dominance. These still largely untested predictions complicate Darwin's hypothesis that more closely related species less easily coexist, and challenge the use of community phylogenetic patterns to infer competition. We field parameterised models of competitor dynamics with pairs of 18 California annual plant species, and then related species' niche and fitness differences to their phylogenetic distance. Stabilising niche differences were unrelated to phylogenetic distance, while species' average fitness showed phylogenetic structure. This meant that more distant relatives had greater competitive asymmetry, which should favour the coexistence of close relatives. Nonetheless, coexistence proved unrelated to phylogeny, due in part to increasing variance in fitness differences with phylogenetic distance, a previously overlooked property of such relationships. Together, these findings question the expectation that distant relatives should more readily coexist.
引用
收藏
页码:836 / 844
页数:9
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   A niche for neutrality [J].
Adler, Peter B. ;
HilleRisLambers, Janneke ;
Levine, Jonathan M. .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2007, 10 (02) :95-104
[2]   Experimental plant communities develop phylogenetically overdispersed abundance distributions during assembly [J].
Allan, Eric ;
Jenkins, Tania ;
Fergus, Alexander J. F. ;
Roscher, Christiane ;
Fischer, Markus ;
Petermann, Jana ;
Weisser, Wolfgang W. ;
Schmid, Bernhard .
ECOLOGY, 2013, 94 (02) :465-477
[3]   Increased competition does not lead to increased phylogenetic overdispersion in a native grassland [J].
Bennett, Jonathan A. ;
Lamb, Eric G. ;
Hall, Jocelyn C. ;
Cardinal-McTeague, Warren M. ;
Cahill, James F., Jr. .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2013, 16 (09) :1168-1176
[4]   Trait vs. phylogenetic diversity as predictors of competition and community composition in herbivorous marine amphipods [J].
Best, R. J. ;
Caulk, N. C. ;
Stachowicz, J. J. .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2013, 16 (01) :72-80
[5]   Testing for phylogenetic signal in comparative data: Behavioral traits are more labile [J].
Blomberg, SP ;
Garland, T ;
Ives, AR .
EVOLUTION, 2003, 57 (04) :717-745
[6]   More closely related species are more ecologically similar in an experimental test [J].
Burns, Jean H. ;
Strauss, Sharon Y. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2011, 108 (13) :5302-5307
[7]   Does phylogenetic relatedness influence the strength of competition among vascular plants? [J].
Cahill, James F., Jr. ;
Kembel, Steven W. ;
Lamb, Eric G. ;
Keddy, Paul A. .
PERSPECTIVES IN PLANT ECOLOGY EVOLUTION AND SYSTEMATICS, 2008, 10 (01) :41-50
[8]   The merging of community ecology and phylogenetic biology [J].
Cavender-Bares, Jeannine ;
Kozak, Kenneth H. ;
Fine, Paul V. A. ;
Kembel, Steven W. .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2009, 12 (07) :693-715
[9]   Mechanisms of maintenance of species diversity [J].
Chesson, P .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY AND SYSTEMATICS, 2000, 31 :343-366
[10]  
Chesson P., 2013, Ecological Systems, P223, DOI [DOI 10.1007/978-1-4614-5755-813, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4614-5755-8_13]