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Nonrandom processes maintain diversity in tropical forests

Authors :
Peter S. Ashton
Md. Nur Supardi Noor
Stephen P. Hubbell
I-Fang Sun
Helene C. Muller-Landau
Fangliang He
Jess K. Zimmerman
Sylvester Tan
Sarayudh Bunyavejchewin
Cheryl Nath
Somboon Kiratiprayoon
Jill Thompson
Takuo Yamakura
Nimal Gunatilleke
H. S. Dattaraja
Savitri Gunatilleke
Robin B. Foster
Richard Condit
Raman Sukumar
Kyle E. Harms
Marie Massa
Robert John
David S. King
Abdul Rahman Kassim
Liza S. Comita
Shameema Esufali
Elizabeth Losos
Akira Itoh
Christopher Wills
Pamela Hall
Stuart J. Davies
James V. LaFrankie
Hebbalalu S. Suresh
Suzanne Loo de Lao
Source :
Science (New York, N.Y.). 311(5760)
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

An ecological community's species diversity tends to erode through time as a result of stochastic extinction, competitive exclusion, and unstable host-enemy dynamics. This erosion of diversity can be prevented over the short term if recruits are highly diverse as a result of preferential recruitment of rare species or, alternatively, if rare species survive preferentially, which increases diversity as the ages of the individuals increase. Here, we present census data from seven New and Old World tropical forest dynamics plots that all show the latter pattern. Within local areas, the trees that survived were as a group more diverse than those that were recruited or those that died. The larger (and therefore on average older) survivors were more diverse within local areas than the smaller survivors. When species were rare in a local area, they had a higher survival rate than when they were common, resulting in enrichment for rare species and increasing diversity with age and size class in these complex ecosystems.

Details

ISSN :
10959203
Volume :
311
Issue :
5760
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7bbfc58d79d80b9fa488d37b715147ba