Estación Biológica Cocha Cashu

The competition-colonization tradeoff is dead: Long live the competition-colonization tradeoff

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Revista Científica:

The American Naturalist

Abreviatura Rev. Científica:

Año:

2001

Volumen:

158

Número:

1

Páginas:

49-63

Serie:

No se registro

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1086/320865

ISBN:

No se registro

ISSN:

No se registro

Keywords (Autor):

habitat destruction, alternative stable states, metapopulation

Keywords(EBCC):

Competición, Colonización, Modelos matemáticos

Resumen

When applied at the individual patch level, the classic competition-colonization models of species coexistence assume that propagules of superior competitors can displace adults of inferior competitors (displacement competition). But if adults are invulnerable to displacement by propagules (as trees are to seeds), and propagules compete to replace adults that die for reasons independent of the outcome of juvenile competition (a lottery system), a competition-colonization trade-off alone is not able to produce coexistence. However, we show that coexistence is possible if patch density varies spatially, such that it becomes a niche axis. We also show how a dispersal-fecundity trade-off can partition variation in patch density. We discuss the application of these models to empirical systems. An important implication of communities coexisting via variation in patch density is that the amount of habitat loss necessarily interacts with the pattern of loss in affecting extinctions, invasions, and coexistence, in contrast to displacement competition models, for which the spatial pattern of loss is not important or is less important. Finally, with respect to mechanisms promoting coexistence, we suggest that trade-offs between different stages of colonization could be far more common in nature than a trade-off between competitive ability and colonization ability

Copyright:

The University of Chicago

Autor (es ):

Douglas W. Yu, Howard B. Wilson

Autor para Correspondencia:

Douglas W. Yu

Idioma Original:

Inglés

Editorial:

The University of Chicago

Ciudad:

No se registro

Idioma:

Inglés

Tipo de Referencia:

Articulo

Investigadores: