Species coexistence in a changing world

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Author
Valladares, Fernando
Bastias, Cristina C.
Godoy, Oscar
Granda, Elena
Escudero, Adrián
Publisher
FrontiersDate
2015Subject
competition, facilitation, global cange, functional traits, heterogeneity, intraspecififc variability, climate changeMETS:
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Show full item recordAbstract
The consequences of global change for the maintenance of species diversity will depend
on the sum of each species responses to the environment and on the interactions
among them. A wide ecological literature supports that these species-specific responses
can arise from factors related to life strategies, evolutionary history and intraspecific
variation, and also from environmental variation in space and time. In the light of recent
advances from coexistence theory combined with mechanistic explanations of diversity
maintenance, we discuss how global change drivers can influence species coexistence.
We revise the importance of both competition and facilitation for understanding
coexistence in different ecosystems, address the influence of phylogenetic relatedness,
functional traits, phenotypic plasticity and intraspecific variability, and discuss lessons
learnt from invasion ecology. While most previous studies have focused their efforts
on disentangling the mechanisms that maintain the biological diversity in species-rich
ecosystems such as tropical forests, grasslands and coral reefs, we argue that much can
be learnt from pauci-specific communities where functional variability within each species,
together with demographic and stochastic processes becomes key to understand
species interactions and eventually community responses to global change.