Dominance of free-floating plants poses a threat to biodiversity in many freshwater ecosystems. Here we propose a theoretical framework to understand this dominance, by modeling the competition for light and nutrients in a layered community of floating and submerged plants. The model shows that at high supply of light and nutrients, floating plants always dominate due to their primacy for light, even when submerged plants have lower minimal resource requirements. The model also shows that floating-plant dominance cannot be an alternative stable state in light-limited environments but only in nutrient-limited environments, depending on the plants’ resource consumption traits. Compared to unlayered communities, the asymmetry in competition fo...
Resource competition theory predicts that the outcome of competition for two nutrients depends on th...
Biodiversity has both fascinated and puzzled biologists(1). In aquatic ecosystems, the biodiversity ...
Many physiological processes in phytoplankton, including nutrient uptake, vary on a number of tempor...
<p>Dominance of free-floating plants poses a threat to biodiversity in many freshwater ecosystems. H...
Dominance of free-floating plants poses a threat to biodiversity in many freshwater ecosystems. Here...
Competition theory has put forward three contrasting hypotheses: Competition for nutrients and light...
Interactions between nutrient limitation and light limitation are fundamental for the dynamics and s...
Light is never distributed homogeneously since it forms a gradient over biomass. As a consequence, t...
The authors demonstrate that floating-plant dominance can be a self-stabilizing ecosystem state, whi...
A key challenge in ecology is to understand how nutrients and light affect the biodiversity and comm...
Light is never distributed homogeneously since it forms a gradient over biomass. As a consequence, t...
Functional diversity (FD) experiments are highly effective for investigating how a community interac...
Niche-based theories and the neutral theory of biodiversity differ in their predictions of how the s...
In shallow aquatic systems benthic and pelagic primary producers typically compete for light and nut...
Resource competition theory predicts that the outcome of competition for two nutrients depends on th...
Biodiversity has both fascinated and puzzled biologists(1). In aquatic ecosystems, the biodiversity ...
Many physiological processes in phytoplankton, including nutrient uptake, vary on a number of tempor...
<p>Dominance of free-floating plants poses a threat to biodiversity in many freshwater ecosystems. H...
Dominance of free-floating plants poses a threat to biodiversity in many freshwater ecosystems. Here...
Competition theory has put forward three contrasting hypotheses: Competition for nutrients and light...
Interactions between nutrient limitation and light limitation are fundamental for the dynamics and s...
Light is never distributed homogeneously since it forms a gradient over biomass. As a consequence, t...
The authors demonstrate that floating-plant dominance can be a self-stabilizing ecosystem state, whi...
A key challenge in ecology is to understand how nutrients and light affect the biodiversity and comm...
Light is never distributed homogeneously since it forms a gradient over biomass. As a consequence, t...
Functional diversity (FD) experiments are highly effective for investigating how a community interac...
Niche-based theories and the neutral theory of biodiversity differ in their predictions of how the s...
In shallow aquatic systems benthic and pelagic primary producers typically compete for light and nut...
Resource competition theory predicts that the outcome of competition for two nutrients depends on th...
Biodiversity has both fascinated and puzzled biologists(1). In aquatic ecosystems, the biodiversity ...
Many physiological processes in phytoplankton, including nutrient uptake, vary on a number of tempor...