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Neutrality and the response of rare species to environmental variance.


ABSTRACT: Neutral models and differential responses of species to environmental heterogeneity offer complementary explanations of species abundance distribution and dynamics. Under what circumstances one model prevails over the other is still a matter of debate. We show that the decay of similarity over time in rocky seashore assemblages of algae and invertebrates sampled over a period of 16 years was consistent with the predictions of a stochastic model of ecological drift at time scales larger than 2 years, but not at time scales between 3 and 24 months when similarity was quantified with an index that reflected changes in abundance of rare species. A field experiment was performed to examine whether assemblages responded neutrally or non-neutrally to changes in temporal variance of disturbance. The experimental results did not reject neutrality, but identified a positive effect of intermediate levels of environmental heterogeneity on the abundance of rare species. This effect translated into a marked decrease in the characteristic time scale of species turnover, highlighting the role of rare species in driving assemblage dynamics in fluctuating environments.

SUBMITTER: Benedetti-Cecchi L 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2481292 | biostudies-literature | 2008 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Neutrality and the response of rare species to environmental variance.

Benedetti-Cecchi Lisandro L   Bertocci Iacopo I   Vaselli Stefano S   Maggi Elena E   Bulleri Fabio F  

PloS one 20080723 7


Neutral models and differential responses of species to environmental heterogeneity offer complementary explanations of species abundance distribution and dynamics. Under what circumstances one model prevails over the other is still a matter of debate. We show that the decay of similarity over time in rocky seashore assemblages of algae and invertebrates sampled over a period of 16 years was consistent with the predictions of a stochastic model of ecological drift at time scales larger than 2 ye  ...[more]

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