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- Title
- The role of evolutionary history and niche differentiation in structuring species co-occurrence in New Zealand Pittosporum (Pittosporaceae)
- Creator
- Nolting, Kristen Marie
- Date
- 2014
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
-
Understanding the processes that shape the spatial distribution of species, and their co-existence in communities, remains one of the biggest challenges that ecologists face today. Investigations of co-existence typically treat species as independent entities, thereby ignoring their shared evolutionary history, niche preferences and functional similarity. This limits the ability of ecologists to make strong inferences regarding co-existence mechanisms. It is more useful to employ a...
Show moreUnderstanding the processes that shape the spatial distribution of species, and their co-existence in communities, remains one of the biggest challenges that ecologists face today. Investigations of co-existence typically treat species as independent entities, thereby ignoring their shared evolutionary history, niche preferences and functional similarity. This limits the ability of ecologists to make strong inferences regarding co-existence mechanisms. It is more useful to employ a pluralistic approach that integrates phylogenetic information and species-specific environmental and trait associations. In this study I evaluated the role of evolutionary history and environmental and functional trait differentiation in predicting species co-occurrence in the New Zealand plant genus Pittosporum. I hypothesized that co-occurring species would be more distantly related than non co-occurring species, given that closely related species are likely to be more ecologically similar as a result of their shared ancestry, and thus competitive interactions would preclude them from co-occurring. Similarly, I predicted that co-occurring species would be more divergent in their functional traits to enable co-existence. I found that co-occurring species were no different than non co-occurring species with respect to their phylogenetic dissimilarity, that co-occurring species had higher environmental niche overlap than non co-occurring species, and that for most traits measured there was no difference in trait dissimilarity among co-occurring and non co-occurring species. Approximate maximum vessel length and leaf nitrogen content, however, showed convergence among co-occurring species.
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