The role of colonization history and subsequent biotic interactions in determining the species composition in communities has long been the subject of debate in ecology. While one narrative has emphasized deterministic assembly rules, another has emphasized historical contingency. One problem lies in approach: community studies are typically either manipulative but somewhat unnatural, or observational but lacking manipulation. Furthermore, while most ecologists now recognize that both historical and biotic factors shape communities, too few studies have moved beyond qualitative descriptions of their roles. Here we use a manipulative approach that leverages natural variation to provide quantitative estimates of the relative contributions of ...
1. Cultivation and pasturing, both historically common forms of agriculture in eastern North America...
Differential dispersal of plant and microbial propagules may result in the geographical disassociati...
The traditional debate on alternative community states has been over whether or not they exist. Rece...
The role of colonization history and subsequent biotic interactions in determining the species compo...
The role of colonization history and subsequent biotic interactions in determining the species compo...
The traditional debate on alternative community states has been over whether or not they exist. Stud...
Conflicting hypotheses predict how traits mediate species establishment and community assembly. Trai...
The relationship between resident species diversity and invasion is generally negative in experiment...
Ecologists have had limited success in understanding which introduced species may become invasive. A...
Priority effects are an important ecological force shaping biotic communities and ecosystem processe...
1. Ecological filter models derived from community assembly theory can inform restoration planning b...
The prevalence of different biotic processes (limiting similarity, weaker competitor exclusion) and ...
Background: The prevalence of different biotic processes (limiting similarity, weaker competitor exc...
Ecological communities often transition from phylogenetic and functional clustering to overdispersio...
1. Cultivation and pasturing, both historically common forms of agriculture in eastern North America...
Differential dispersal of plant and microbial propagules may result in the geographical disassociati...
The traditional debate on alternative community states has been over whether or not they exist. Rece...
The role of colonization history and subsequent biotic interactions in determining the species compo...
The role of colonization history and subsequent biotic interactions in determining the species compo...
The traditional debate on alternative community states has been over whether or not they exist. Stud...
Conflicting hypotheses predict how traits mediate species establishment and community assembly. Trai...
The relationship between resident species diversity and invasion is generally negative in experiment...
Ecologists have had limited success in understanding which introduced species may become invasive. A...
Priority effects are an important ecological force shaping biotic communities and ecosystem processe...
1. Ecological filter models derived from community assembly theory can inform restoration planning b...
The prevalence of different biotic processes (limiting similarity, weaker competitor exclusion) and ...
Background: The prevalence of different biotic processes (limiting similarity, weaker competitor exc...
Ecological communities often transition from phylogenetic and functional clustering to overdispersio...
1. Cultivation and pasturing, both historically common forms of agriculture in eastern North America...
Differential dispersal of plant and microbial propagules may result in the geographical disassociati...
The traditional debate on alternative community states has been over whether or not they exist. Rece...