Ecological communities often transition from phylogenetic and functional clustering to overdispersion over succession as judged by space-for-time substitution studies. Such a pattern has been generally attributed to the increase in competitive exclusion of closely related species with similar traits through time, although colonisation and extinction have rarely been examined. Using 44 years of uninterrupted old-field succession in New Jersey, USA, we confirmed that phylogenetic and functional clustering decreased as succession unfolded, but the transition was largely driven by colonisation. Early colonists were closely related and functionally similar to residents, while later colonists became less similar to the species present. Extirpated...
1. Phylogenetic tools have increasingly been used in community ecology to describe evolutionary rela...
Clades diversify in an ecological context, but most macroevolutionary models do not directly encapsu...
1. Despite extensive development of successional theory, few empirical studies have evaluated whethe...
Ecological communities often transition from phylogenetic and functional clustering to overdispersio...
Succession has been a focal point of ecological research for over a century, but thus far has been p...
Theory on plant succession predicts a temporal increase in the complexity of spatial community struc...
The changes in phylogenetic composition and structure of communities during succession following dis...
Whether biotic or abiotic factors are the dominant drivers of clade diversification is a long-standi...
Understanding why communities appear deterministically dominated by relatively few species is an age...
1. Theory predicts that the processes generating biodiversity after disturbance will change during s...
Evolutionary biologists since Darwin have hypothesized that closely related species compete more int...
Ecological succession has a history of over 100 years in ecology. It refers to the way in which comm...
While human activities are known to elicit rapid turnover in species composition through time, the p...
Studies addressing the question of how communities develop reported contrasting temporal patterns of...
To gain insight into the ecological processes driving community reassembly in disturbed ecosystems, ...
1. Phylogenetic tools have increasingly been used in community ecology to describe evolutionary rela...
Clades diversify in an ecological context, but most macroevolutionary models do not directly encapsu...
1. Despite extensive development of successional theory, few empirical studies have evaluated whethe...
Ecological communities often transition from phylogenetic and functional clustering to overdispersio...
Succession has been a focal point of ecological research for over a century, but thus far has been p...
Theory on plant succession predicts a temporal increase in the complexity of spatial community struc...
The changes in phylogenetic composition and structure of communities during succession following dis...
Whether biotic or abiotic factors are the dominant drivers of clade diversification is a long-standi...
Understanding why communities appear deterministically dominated by relatively few species is an age...
1. Theory predicts that the processes generating biodiversity after disturbance will change during s...
Evolutionary biologists since Darwin have hypothesized that closely related species compete more int...
Ecological succession has a history of over 100 years in ecology. It refers to the way in which comm...
While human activities are known to elicit rapid turnover in species composition through time, the p...
Studies addressing the question of how communities develop reported contrasting temporal patterns of...
To gain insight into the ecological processes driving community reassembly in disturbed ecosystems, ...
1. Phylogenetic tools have increasingly been used in community ecology to describe evolutionary rela...
Clades diversify in an ecological context, but most macroevolutionary models do not directly encapsu...
1. Despite extensive development of successional theory, few empirical studies have evaluated whethe...