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RELATIONSHIPS AMONG SPECIES TRAITS: SEPARATING LEVELS OF RESPONSE AND IDENTIFYING LINKAGES TO ABUNDANCE
Author(s) -
Nash Suding Katharine,
Goldberg Deborah E.,
Hartman Kurt M.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.144
H-Index - 294
eISSN - 1939-9170
pISSN - 0012-9658
DOI - 10.1890/0012-9658(2003)084[0001:rastsl]2.0.co;2
Subject(s) - ecology , abundance (ecology) , biology , disturbance (geology) , colonization , paleontology
We test the idea that species interactions and environmental tolerances translate constrained traits to patterns of species distribution and abundance through a series of trade‐offs. First, we suggest a framework to classify relationships among traits at different levels of organization. We then synthesize experiments to quantify relationships at these multiple levels for a group of 11 prairie plant species that characterize different disturbance regimes. Finally, we identify linkages among traits at these different levels and examine how these linkages relate plant traits to patterns of species composition following gap creation. Linkages were evident between all levels of response, lending credence to the idea that relationships among organismal traits can shape dynamics of species interactions and thereby translate into abundance patterns. Interestingly, the important trade‐offs and translators for the set of species we examined were not always the ones predicted by conceptual models. For instance, we found evidence of trade‐offs between measures of competitive and tolerance (to soil compaction) abilities, but little evidence of negative correlations between competitive abilities in different environments or between colonization and competitive abilities. Tolerance (to defoliation, shade, drought) and colonization abilities, rather than competitive ability, appeared to be important translators that linked organismal traits to abundance patterns. In addition, growth rates of the species under field conditions, but not other measures of demographic success (e.g., survival, seedbank density), were related to the species distributions due to soil disturbance. Although our results support the idea that trade‐offs scale across several levels of organization, specific predictions of several well‐known hypotheses are not borne out along all levels of organization and other, less emphasized trade‐offs appear to be as important in our study system. Corresponding Editor: S. Lavorel.

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