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Stability of forest biodiversity

James S. Clark () and Jason S. McLachlan
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James S. Clark: Duke University
Jason S. McLachlan: Duke University

Nature, 2003, vol. 423, issue 6940, 635-638

Abstract: Abstract Two hypotheses to explain potentially high forest biodiversity have different implications for the number and kinds of species that can coexist and the potential loss of biodiversity in the absence of speciation. The first hypothesis involves stabilizing mechanisms, which include tradeoffs between species in terms of their capacities to disperse to sites where competition is weak1,2,3,4, to exploit abundant resources effectively5,6 and to compete for scarce resources7. Stabilization results because competitors thrive at different times and places. An alternative, ‘neutral model’ suggests that stabilizing mechanisms may be superfluous. This explanation emphasizes ‘equalizing’ mechanisms8, because competitive exclusion of similar species is slow. Lack of ecologically relevant differences means that abundances experience random ‘neutral drift’, with slow extinction9,10,11. The relative importance of these two mechanisms is unknown, because assumptions and predictions involve broad temporal and spatial scales. Here we demonstrate that predictions of neutral drift are testable using palaeodata. The results demonstrate strong stabilizing forces. By contrast with the neutral prediction of increasing variance among sites over time, we show that variances in post-Glacial tree abundances among sites stabilize rapidly, and abundances remain coherent over broad geographical scales.

Date: 2003
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DOI: 10.1038/nature01632

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