The global decline of coral reefs highlights the need to understand the mechanisms that regulate community structure and sustain biodiversity in these systems. The neutral theory, which assumes that individuals are demographically identical regardless of species, seeks to explain ubiquitous features of community structure and biodiversity patterns. Here we present a test of neutral-theory predictions with the use of an extensive species level data set of Indo-Pacific coral communities. We show that coral assemblages differ markedly from neutral-model predictions for patterns of community similarity and the relative abundance of species. Within local communities, neutral models do not fit relative abundance distributions as well as the class...
Aim: Understanding patterns in a species' occupancy and abundance across multiple scales is importan...
More diverse communities are thought to be more stable—the diversity–stability hypothesis—due to inc...
Current neutral theory in community ecology views local biodiversity as a result of the interplay be...
Neutral theory explains patterns of biodiversity based solely on speciation, demographic stochastici...
Although ecological assemblages frequently depart from neutral model predictions, these discrepancie...
<div><p>(A) Surveys of coral reefs on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, and elsewhere in the Indo...
Explaining patterns of commonness and rarity is fundamental for understanding and managing biodivers...
Distributions of numerical abundance and resource use among species are fundamental aspects of commu...
Abundance patterns in ecological communities have important implications for biodiversity maintenanc...
Abundance patterns in ecological communities have important implications for biodiversity maintenanc...
Aim: Understanding patterns in a species' occupancy and abundance across multiple scales is importan...
Community ecologists now recognize that to understand patterns of biodiversity, there is an urgent n...
Aim: Understanding patterns in a species' occupancy and abundance across multiple scales is importan...
More diverse communities are thought to be more stable—the diversity–stability hypothesis—due to inc...
Current neutral theory in community ecology views local biodiversity as a result of the interplay be...
Neutral theory explains patterns of biodiversity based solely on speciation, demographic stochastici...
Although ecological assemblages frequently depart from neutral model predictions, these discrepancie...
<div><p>(A) Surveys of coral reefs on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, and elsewhere in the Indo...
Explaining patterns of commonness and rarity is fundamental for understanding and managing biodivers...
Distributions of numerical abundance and resource use among species are fundamental aspects of commu...
Abundance patterns in ecological communities have important implications for biodiversity maintenanc...
Abundance patterns in ecological communities have important implications for biodiversity maintenanc...
Aim: Understanding patterns in a species' occupancy and abundance across multiple scales is importan...
Community ecologists now recognize that to understand patterns of biodiversity, there is an urgent n...
Aim: Understanding patterns in a species' occupancy and abundance across multiple scales is importan...
More diverse communities are thought to be more stable—the diversity–stability hypothesis—due to inc...
Current neutral theory in community ecology views local biodiversity as a result of the interplay be...