Abstract
It is widely recognized that colonists and competitors dominate early and late succession, respectively, with selected species having different colonizing and competitive abilities. However, it remains unknown whether colonizing and competitive ability can determine species abundance directly over succession. The data for five key functional traits were collected (photosynthesis rate, leaf turgor loss point, leaf proline content, seed mass, and seed germination rate), which are direct indicators of plant competitive and colonizing abilities including growth, drought and cold stress resistance, dispersal, and seed dormancy. Here, we tested the effects of colonizing and competitive abilities on species abundance, by employing a linear mixed‐effects model to examine the shifts in the relationship between species abundance and these five colonization and competition‐related traits in species‐rich subalpine secondary successional meadows (at 4, 6, 10, 13 years of age, and undisturbed, respectively) of the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau. The abundant species at the early‐successional meadows tend to have high photosynthetic rate, high leaf proline content, low seed mass, and seed germination rate for having high colonizing ability, but low competitive ability. By contrast, late‐successional communities tend to be dominated by species with high competitive ability, but low colonizing ability, indicated by large seeds, high seed germination rate, low photosynthetic rate, and leaf proline content. The observed directional shifts in the relationships between traits (photosynthetic rate, leaf proline content, seed mass, and seed germination rate) and abundance with successional age, bring two new understandings of community assembly during succession of subalpine meadows in the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau. First, it discloses that the differences in species abundance over succession can be directly attributed to differences in colonizing and competitive abilities of different species. Second, it expands the effects of multiple life historical differences including growth, resource competitive ability, cold stress resistance, dispersal, and seed germination strategy, represented by functional traits on community assembly along succession, that is, from the species to the community level.
Highlights
The factors that determine species abundance during ecological succession are among the oldest questions in community ecology (Bhaskar, Dawson, & Balvanera, 2014; Cornwell & Ackerly, 2010; Gleason, 1927; Shipley, Vile, & Garnier, 2006; Whittaker & Goodman, 1979)
It is hypothesized that ample spatial availability for colonization, high nitrogen accessibility, drought and cold stress, and seed dispersal will encourage abundant species in early succession, with high photosynthetic rate, leaf proline content, small seeds, and a low seed germination rate, for having high colonizing ability including fast-growing, high abiotic stress tolerance, high dispersal, and high seed dormancy, but low competitive ability
Due to nitrogen competition, late-successional communities tend to be dominated by species with relatively large seeds and a high seed germination rate, low photosynthetic rate, and leaf proline content, which guarantees species to have high competitive ability, but low colonizing ability
Summary
The factors that determine species abundance during ecological succession are among the oldest questions in community ecology (Bhaskar, Dawson, & Balvanera, 2014; Cornwell & Ackerly, 2010; Gleason, 1927; Shipley, Vile, & Garnier, 2006; Whittaker & Goodman, 1979). It is hypothesized that ample spatial availability for colonization, high nitrogen accessibility, drought and cold stress, and seed dispersal will encourage abundant species in early succession, with high photosynthetic rate, leaf proline content, small seeds, and a low seed germination rate, for having high colonizing ability including fast-growing, high abiotic stress tolerance, high dispersal, and high seed dormancy, but low competitive ability. Due to nitrogen competition, late-successional communities tend to be dominated by species with relatively large seeds and a high seed germination rate, low photosynthetic rate, and leaf proline content, which guarantees species to have high competitive ability, but low colonizing ability
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