Published January 20, 2017 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Resource availability determines the importance of niche-based vs. stochastic community assembly in grasslands

  • 1. Aarhus University
  • 2. Leuphana University
  • 3. Technical University Munich

Description

Niche-based selection and stochastic processes can operate simultaneously to generate spatial and temporal variation in species composition. Yet, the conditions under which ecological dynamics are dominated by niche-based vs. stochastic processes are poorly understood. Using a field experiment in early-successional temperate grassland and null models of beta diversity, this study investigates the effects of soil nutrient supply on the relative importance of niche-based selection vs. stochastic dynamics for variation in species composition among sites. Nutrient availability was manipulated experimentally, individual seed mixtures with 25 species were sown in each experimental plot, and then stochastic and deterministic niche-based assembly processes were allowed to happen. We found that compositional variation among grassland plots with low nutrient supply was driven by stochastic immigration and extinctions. In contrast, nutrient enrichment reduced the importance of stochasticity and imposed a deterministic environmental filter that homogenized communities through the selection of few species with greater competitive ability for light. This demonstrates that soil nutrient availability is a critical environmental feature that dictates the degree to which terrestrial plant communities are controlled by niche-based selection vs. stochastic assembly processes. Our study shows further that alternative states of eutrophic grasslands emerge from initial stochastic variation in the composition of a particular functional group of species that can become dominant at high nutrient supply. We discuss potential mechanisms underlying the shift from stochastic to niche-driven dynamics along soil nutrient gradients.

Notes

Files

addplot2013.txt

Files (396.0 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:110495d2091c370dcf4c5417e261ac0a
7.1 kB Preview Download
md5:2702c5985adc136dbcfb90f3c3ffbba5
7.1 kB Preview Download
md5:ca30f826844328fb895cdc24e6de230a
7.1 kB Preview Download
md5:6566514b3c02bc834c5706f74df9f0d5
535 Bytes Preview Download
md5:90493166a06b5f89ad7c5492d579fae4
123.4 kB Preview Download
md5:945264f0eed26a29f1c516687fa87cda
123.4 kB Preview Download
md5:e037ded967df7019919d7a58b007a86e
123.4 kB Preview Download
md5:9647be7f67a7a27c784204bc76329fe0
4.2 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/oik.03969 (DOI)