Can environmental constraints determine random patterns of plant species co-occurrence?
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John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Abstract
Plant community ecologists use the null model approach to infer assembly processes
from observed patterns of species co-occurrence. In about a third of published
studies, the null hypothesis of random assembly cannot be rejected.
When this occurs, plant ecologists interpret that the observed random pattern
is not environmentally constrained – but probably generated by stochastic processes.
The null model approach (using the C-score and the discrepancy index)
was used to test for random assembly under two simulation algorithms. Logistic
regression, distance-based redundancy analysis, and constrained ordination were
used to test for environmental determinism (species segregation along environmental
gradients or turnover and species aggregation). This article introduces
an environmentally determined community of alpine hydrophytes that presents
itself as randomly assembled. The pathway through which the random pattern
arises in this community is suggested to be as follows: Two simultaneous environmental processes, one leading to species aggregation and the other leading
to species segregation, concurrently generate the observed pattern, which results
to be neither aggregated nor segregated – but random. A simulation study supports
this suggestion. Although apparently simple, the null model approach seems to assume that a single ecological factor prevails or that if several factors
decisively influence the community, then they all exert their influence in the
same direction, generating either aggregation or segregation. As these assumptions are unlikely to hold in most cases and assembly processes cannot be
inferred from random patterns, we would like to propose plant ecologists to
investigate specifically the ecological processes responsible for observed random
patterns, instead of trying to infer processes from patterns
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García-Baquero, G., Crujeiras, R.M. (2015). Can environmental constraints determine random patterns of plant species co-occurrence?. "Ecology and Evolution", 5(5), 1088-1099 [doi: 10.1002/ece3.1349]
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1349Sponsors
This research and publication was possible
thanks to a postdoctoral fellowship at The
Open University (UK) and the project “Development of the recovery plan for A.
rioxana in la Rioja. Measures of research,
monitoring and control (University of
Salamanca)”, both funded by the Regional
Government of La Rioja (Spain)
Rights
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)







