Coexistence in fire-prone Mediterranean-type shrublands has been explored in the past using both neutral and niche-based models. However, distinct differences between plant functional types (PFTs), such as fire-killed vs resprouting responses to fire, and the relative similarity of species within a PFT, suggest that coexistence models might benefit from combining both neutral and niche-based (stabilizing) approaches. We developed a multispecies metacommunity model where species are grouped into two PFTs (fire-killed vs resprouting) to investigate the roles of neutral and stabilizing processes on species richness and rank-abundance distributions. Our results show that species richness can be maintained in two ways: i) strictly neutral specie...
Changing disturbance-climate interactions will drive shifts in plant communities: these effects are ...
Understanding how abiotic disturbance and biotic interactions determine pollinator and flowering-pla...
Despite decades of research documenting niche differences between species, we lack a quantitative un...
Coexistence in fire-prone Mediterranean-type shrublands has been explored in the past using both neu...
Coexistence in fire-prone Mediterranean-type shrublands has been explored in the past using both neu...
Understanding the mechanisms that maintain diversity is important for managing ecosystems for specie...
Across plant communities worldwide, fire regimes reflect a combination of climatic factors and plant...
A number of models provide potential explanations for the persistence of high plant species diversit...
Metacommunity theory allows predictions about the dynamics of potentially interacting species assemb...
Many terrestrial ecosystems are fire prone, such that their composition and structure are largely du...
We construct a model of a multispecies forest that is often affected by major fires and explicitly i...
Wildfire is a fundamental disturbance process in many ecological communities, and is critical in mai...
Wildfire is a fundamental disturbance process in many ecological communities, and is critical in mai...
Changing disturbance-climate interactions will drive shifts in plant communities: these effects are ...
Fire is an important disturbance process, having significant socio-economic consequences on the one ...
Changing disturbance-climate interactions will drive shifts in plant communities: these effects are ...
Understanding how abiotic disturbance and biotic interactions determine pollinator and flowering-pla...
Despite decades of research documenting niche differences between species, we lack a quantitative un...
Coexistence in fire-prone Mediterranean-type shrublands has been explored in the past using both neu...
Coexistence in fire-prone Mediterranean-type shrublands has been explored in the past using both neu...
Understanding the mechanisms that maintain diversity is important for managing ecosystems for specie...
Across plant communities worldwide, fire regimes reflect a combination of climatic factors and plant...
A number of models provide potential explanations for the persistence of high plant species diversit...
Metacommunity theory allows predictions about the dynamics of potentially interacting species assemb...
Many terrestrial ecosystems are fire prone, such that their composition and structure are largely du...
We construct a model of a multispecies forest that is often affected by major fires and explicitly i...
Wildfire is a fundamental disturbance process in many ecological communities, and is critical in mai...
Wildfire is a fundamental disturbance process in many ecological communities, and is critical in mai...
Changing disturbance-climate interactions will drive shifts in plant communities: these effects are ...
Fire is an important disturbance process, having significant socio-economic consequences on the one ...
Changing disturbance-climate interactions will drive shifts in plant communities: these effects are ...
Understanding how abiotic disturbance and biotic interactions determine pollinator and flowering-pla...
Despite decades of research documenting niche differences between species, we lack a quantitative un...