Habitat filtering determines the functional niche occupancy of plant communities worldwide
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How the patterns of niche occupancy vary from species-poor to species-rich com munities is a fundamental question in ecology that has a central bearing on the
processes that drive patterns of biodiversity. As species richness increases, habitat
filtering should constrain the expansion of total niche volume, while limiting similar ity should restrict the degree of niche overlap between species. Here, by explicitly
incorporating intraspecific trait variability, we investigate the relationship between
functional niche occupancy and species richness at the global scale.
2. We assembled 21 datasets worldwide, spanning tropical to temperate biomes and
consisting of 313 plant communities representing different growth forms. We
quantified three key niche occupancy components (the total functional volume, the
functional overlap between species and the average functional volume per species)
for each community, related each component to species richness, and compared
each component to the null expectations.
3. As species richness increased, communities were more functionally diverse (an
increase in total functional volume), and species overlapped more within the com munity (an increase in functional overlap) but did not more finely divide the functional
space (no decline in average functional volume). Null model analyses provided evi dence for habitat filtering (smaller total functional volume than expectation), but not
for limiting similarity (larger functional overlap and larger average functional volume
than expectation) as a process driving the pattern of functional niche occupancy.
4. Synthesis. Habitat filtering is a widespread process driving the pattern of functional
niche occupancy across plant communities and coexisting species tend to be more
functionally similar rather than more functionally specialized. Our results indicate
that including intraspecific trait variability will contribute to a better understanding
of the processes driving patterns of functional niche occupancy.
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YUANZHI, Li et al. Habitat filtering determines the functional niche occupancy of plant communities worldwide. Journal of Ecology, Hoboken, v. 106, n. 3, p. 1001-1009, 2018. DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.12802. Disponível em: https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2745.12802. Acesso em: 14 jul. 2023.