2015
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2015.00866
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Species coexistence in a changing world

Abstract: The consequences of global change for the maintenance of species diversity will depend on the sum of each species responses to the environment and on the interactions among them. A wide ecological literature supports that these species-specific responses can arise from factors related to life strategies, evolutionary history and intraspecific variation, and also from environmental variation in space and time. In the light of recent advances from coexistence theory combined with mechanistic explanations of dive… Show more

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Cited by 159 publications
(129 citation statements)
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References 162 publications
(199 reference statements)
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“…Niche-based hypotheses to explain species coexistence have also been challenged by the neutral theory, which states that local coexistence is driven by broader biogeographical and evolutionary processes rather than by deterministic ecological mechanisms, emphasising the importance of intraspecific variability (Hubbell 2001;Valladares et al 2015). This theory is attractive for its simplicity, but provocative for its assumption that individuals of different species in rich communities are ecologically equivalent.…”
Section: Ontogenetic Effects: Shade Tolerance From Seedlings To Adultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Niche-based hypotheses to explain species coexistence have also been challenged by the neutral theory, which states that local coexistence is driven by broader biogeographical and evolutionary processes rather than by deterministic ecological mechanisms, emphasising the importance of intraspecific variability (Hubbell 2001;Valladares et al 2015). This theory is attractive for its simplicity, but provocative for its assumption that individuals of different species in rich communities are ecologically equivalent.…”
Section: Ontogenetic Effects: Shade Tolerance From Seedlings To Adultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, high within-species variability in leaf trait responses has been shown to be significantly affected by shading also in sub-boreal conifer species with different niche preferences (Lilles et al 2014). Both approaches, niche and neutrality, can be regarded as the opposing ends of a continuum from competitive to stochastic exclusion, with neutrality becoming more pronounced as species richness, niche overlap and dispersal capabilities increase (Gravel et al 2006;Valladares et al 2015), for example towards the Equator, where the prolonged vegetation period allows to successfully overcome tolerating several stress factors at the same time (Laanisto and Niinemets 2015).…”
Section: Ontogenetic Effects: Shade Tolerance From Seedlings To Adultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The tropical forests harbor an enormous diversity of plant species and are conservation priorities in a fast‐changing world (Figure S1); however, the mechanisms that determine tropical tree community assembly remain important yet not well‐solved questions in community ecology (Valladares, Bastias, Godoy, Granda, & Escudero, 2015). The classical niche theory predicts that communities with more environmental heterogeneity will have higher species diversity than those with less heterogeneity because more niches can be partitioned in a heterogeneous habitat (Figure 1a; Hutchinson, 1957; Kadmon & Allouche, 2007; Macarthur & Macarthur, 1961; Ricklefs, 1977; Svenning, 2001).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In turn, trait-based ecology provides a mechanistic connection between ecological processes and these deterministic processes (Weiher and Keddy 1995;Westoby and Wright 2006;McGill et al 2006). From our perspective, the stochastic versus deterministic notions constitute complementary and not mutually exclusive aspects of a very complex process (Gravel et al 2006), and their relative importance varies across biomes and ecological conditions (Valladares et al 2015).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%