Abstract

Repeatability of community composition has been a critical aspect for community structure, which is closely associated with community stability, predictability, conservation biology and ecological restoration. It has been shown that both immigration and local dispersal limitation can affect the community composition in both neutral and niche model. Hence, we use a spatially explicit individual-based model to investigate the potential influence of immigration rate and strength of local dispersal limitation on repeatability in both neutral and niche models. Similarity measures are used to quantify repeatability. We examine the repeatability of community composition among replicate communities (which means the same community repeats many times), and between niche and neutral replicate communities. We find the correlation between repeatability and immigration rate is positive in the neutral model and an inverted unimodal in the niche model. The correlation between repeatability and local dispersal distance is positive in the niche model and negative in the neutral model. High repeatability between niche communities and neutral communities is observed with high immigration rates or when high local dispersal distance appears in the niche model or low local dispersal distance in the neutral model. Our results show that repeatability of community composition is not only dependent on the types of community models (niche vs. neutrality) but also strongly determined by immigration rates and local dispersal limitation.

Highlights

  • Repeatability of community composition is a key property of community stability and predictability [1,2,3,4,5], which plays a major role in conservation biology and ecological restoration and can be used as the foundation for regional conservation planning [6]

  • Since repeatability is an important aspect of community assembly and immigration and dispersal limitation play significant roles in community composition, we investigate in detail the effects of immigration rate and strength of dispersal limitation on repeatability of community composition among replicate communities in both neutral and niche theories using an individual-based spatially explicit model

  • We investigated the influence of immigration rates and dispersal limitation on repeatability in neutral and niche communities separately and between neutral and niche communities together

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Summary

Introduction

Repeatability of community composition is a key property of community stability and predictability [1,2,3,4,5], which plays a major role in conservation biology and ecological restoration and can be used as the foundation for regional conservation planning [6]. The repeatability of community composition is one of the important aspects of community assembly [7], like species diversity and relative species abundance distribution [8,9,10,11]. The factors influencing the community composition are different between classic niche and neutral theory. Community composition is determined by species-specific difference and heterogeneous environment [11,12,13,14]. More studies have showed that incorporating immigration and local dispersal limitation with niche theory can preferably explain community composition; these two factors play important roles in neutral theory [17,18,19]

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