Authors
Jacob Usinowicz, Chia-Hao Chang-Yang, Yu-Yun Chen, James S Clark, Christine Fletcher, Nancy C Garwood, Zhanqing Hao, Jill Johnstone, Yiching Lin, Margaret R Metz, Takashi Masaki, Tohru Nakashizuka, I-Fang Sun, Renato Valencia, Yunyun Wang, Jess K Zimmerman, Anthony R Ives, S Joseph Wright
Publication date
2017/10/5
Journal
Nature
Volume
550
Issue
7674
Pages
105-108
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
The tropical forests of Borneo and Amazonia may each contain more tree species diversity in half a square kilometre than do all the temperate forests of Europe, North America, and Asia combined. Biologists have long been fascinated by this disparity, using it to investigate potential drivers of biodiversity. Latitudinal variation in many of these drivers is expected to create geographic differences in ecological,, and evolutionary processes,, and evidence increasingly shows that tropical ecosystems have higher rates of diversification, clade origination, and clade dispersal,. However, there is currently no evidence to link gradients in ecological processes within communities at a local scale directly to the geographic gradient in biodiversity. Here, we show geographic variation in the storage effect, an ecological mechanism that reduces the potential for competitive exclusion more strongly in the tropics than it does in …
Total citations
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