6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c273f
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Geographic variability of ecological niches of plant species: are competition and stress relevant?
Walter DurkaRoland BrandlAndreas PrinzingStefan Klotzsubject
Ecological nicheCoexistence theoryEcological releaseEcologyRange (biology)media_common.quotation_subjectNicheNiche differentiationNiche segregationBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCompetition (biology)media_commondescription
A species’ niche position may differ strongly between geographic regions, for instance due to the effect of competitors or ecophysiological stress. However, it is unclear whether such strong geographic niche variation is the rule or the exception. We compared the niche positions of plant species between central England and eastern central Europe (as available from the literature), using phylogenetically independent contrasts. We found that most species occupied similar niche positions in both regions. More importantly, we found that niche variation was not higher in species susceptible to competitive displacement. Nor was niche variation higher in species that reach the edge of their range and thus suffer ecophysiological stress. We suggest that although these species might be easily displaced in their position along a niche axis, they may only be displaced over a short distance. Overall, ecological mechanisms that cause niche variation at the local scale may be much less relevant at the geographic scale.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2002-12-01 |