Authors
CJ Clark, JR Poulsen, DJ Levey, CW Osenberg
Publication date
2007/7
Journal
The American Naturalist
Volume
170
Issue
1
Pages
128-142
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Description
We examine the relative importance of processes that underlie plant population abundance and distribution. Two opposing views dominate the field. One posits that the ability to establish at a site is determined by the availability of suitable microsites (establishment limitation), while the second asserts that recruitment is limited by the availability of seeds (seed limitation). An underlying problem is that establishment and seed limitation are typically viewed as mutually exclusive. We conducted a meta‐analysis of seed addition experiments to assess the relative strength of establishment and seed limitation to seedling recruitment. We asked (1) To what degree are populations seed and establishment limited? (2) Under what conditions (e.g., habitats and life‐history traits) are species more or less limited by each? (3) How can seed addition studies be better designed to enhance our understanding of plant recruitment …
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