Authors
Eric Allan, Tania Jenkins, Alexander JF Fergus, Christiane Roscher, Markus Fischer, Jana Petermann, Wolfgang W Weisser, Bernhard Schmid
Publication date
2013/2
Journal
Ecology
Volume
94
Issue
2
Pages
465-477
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Description
The importance of competition between similar species in driving community assembly is much debated. Recently, phylogenetic patterns in species composition have been investigated to help resolve this question: phylogenetic clustering is taken to imply environmental filtering, and phylogenetic overdispersion to indicate limiting similarity between species. We used experimental plant communities with random species compositions and initially even abundance distributions to examine the development of phylogenetic pattern in species abundance distributions. Where composition was held constant by weeding, abundance distributions became overdispersed through time, but only in communities that contained distantly related clades, some with several species (i.e., a mix of closely and distantly related species). Phylogenetic pattern in composition therefore constrained the development of overdispersed …
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