COMMUNITY-WIDE ASSEMBLY PATTERNS UNMASKED - THE IMPORTANCE OF SPECIESDIFFERING GEOGRAPHICAL RANGES

Citation
L. Stone et al., COMMUNITY-WIDE ASSEMBLY PATTERNS UNMASKED - THE IMPORTANCE OF SPECIESDIFFERING GEOGRAPHICAL RANGES, The American naturalist, 148(6), 1996, pp. 997-1015
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00030147
Volume
148
Issue
6
Year of publication
1996
Pages
997 - 1015
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-0147(1996)148:6<997:CAPU-T>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
A community assembly rule, applied to rodent communities of deserts of the American Southwest, suggests that local communities are competiti vely structured. Species composition appears more evenly distributed a mong functional groups than would have been expected had species enter ed local communities independently of other species that were already there. This suggestion is based on a greater number than expected of ' 'favored states'' (local communities in which no two functional groups differ in the number of species by more than one). We randomized comm unities by two different methods and found that the observed number of favored states, though greater than that expected, is not in an extre me tail of the simulated distribution, so that one would not have reje cted a hypothesis that species join local communities independently. T he suggested result, contradicted by our findings, is probably an arti fact of the fact that the previous assembly rule treated all species a s equally likely to be found on all sites. Further, we found that the excess of the observed number of favored states over that expected by our two methods can probably be explained by the fact that the few wid espread species are not treated realistically. Our analysis overcomes a previous methodological problem (the Narcissus effect) in which the null model is not truly null with respect to competition. Additionally , our techniques provide a means of exploring the spatial structure in the nonrandom distribution of species.