The functional form of specialised predation affects whether Janzen–Connell effects can prevent competitive exclusion
Janzen–Connell effects (JCEs), specialised predation of seeds and seedlings near conspecific trees, are hypothesised to maintain species richness. While previous studies show JCEs can maintain high richness relative to neutral communities, recent theoretical work indicates JCEs may weakly inhibit co...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecology letters 2022-06, Vol.25 (6), p.1458-1470 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Janzen–Connell effects (JCEs), specialised predation of seeds and seedlings near conspecific trees, are hypothesised to maintain species richness. While previous studies show JCEs can maintain high richness relative to neutral communities, recent theoretical work indicates JCEs may weakly inhibit competitive exclusion when species exhibit interspecific fitness variation. However, recent models make somewhat restrictive assumptions about the functional form of specialised predation—that JCEs occur at a fixed rate when offspring are within a fixed distance of a conspecific tree. Using a theoretical model, I show that the functional form of JCEs largely impacts their ability to maintain coexistence. If predation pressure increases additively with adult tree density and decays exponentially with distance, JCEs maintain considerably higher species richness than predicted by recent models. Loosely parameterising the model with data from a Panamanian tree community, I elucidate the conditions under which JCEs are capable of maintaining high species richness.
Recent theory challenges the efficacy of Janzen Connell Effects in maintaining species diversity. I examine how modeling assumptions affect these results. I find integrating more realistic assumptions into the model permits greater diversity maintenance than recent results indicate |
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ISSN: | 1461-023X 1461-0248 |
DOI: | 10.1111/ele.14014 |