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Temporal coexistence mechanisms contribute to the latitudinal gradient in forest diversity

Authors :
Usinowicz, Jacob
Chang-Yang, Chia-Hao
Chen, Yu-Yun
Clark, James S.
Fletcher, Christine
Garwood, Nancy C.
Hao, Zhanqing
Johnstone, Jill
Lin, Yiching
Metz, Margaret R.
Masaki, Takashi
Nakashizuka, Tohru
Sun, I-Fang
Valencia, Renato
Wang, Yunyun
Zimmerman, Jess K.
Ives, Anthony R.
Wright, S. Joseph
Source :
Nature; October 2017, Vol. 550 Issue: 7674 p105-108, 4p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The tropical forests of Borneo and Amazonia may each contain more tree species diversity in half a square kilometre than do all the temperate forests of Europe, North America, and Asia combined. Biologists have long been fascinated by this disparity, using it to investigate potential drivers of biodiversity. Latitudinal variation in many of these drivers is expected to create geographic differences in ecological and evolutionary processes, and evidence increasingly shows that tropical ecosystems have higher rates of diversification, clade origination, and clade dispersal. However, there is currently no evidence to link gradients in ecological processes within communities at a local scale directly to the geographic gradient in biodiversity. Here, we show geographic variation in the storage effect, an ecological mechanism that reduces the potential for competitive exclusion more strongly in the tropics than it does in temperate and boreal zones, decreasing the ratio of interspecific-to-intraspecific competition by 0.25% for each degree of latitude that an ecosystem is located closer to the Equator. Additionally, we find evidence that latitudinal variation in climate underpins these differences; longer growing seasons in the tropics reduce constraints on the seasonal timing of reproduction, permitting lower recruitment synchrony between species and thereby enhancing niche partitioning through the storage effect. Our results demonstrate that the strength of the storage effect, and therefore its impact on diversity within communities, varies latitudinally in association with climate. This finding highlights the importance of biotic interactions in shaping geographic diversity patterns, and emphasizes the need to understand the mechanisms underpinning ecological processes in greater detail than has previously been appreciated.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
550
Issue :
7674
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs43386134
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature24038