Abstract

A long-standing paradigm in ecology is that species diversity in a community accrues over succession. Central to this process are the mechanisms that regulate neighbourhood diversity around species of different functional groups such as early vs late-successional species. However, there is poor understanding of the accumulation of this neighbourhood diversity and its contribution to community diversity. We calculated neighbourhood species and phylogenetic diversities for adult trees of 10 species belonging to three groups: early-, mid-, and late-successional species in a 25-ha forest stem-mapping plot in subtropical China. We compared these diversities with homogeneous and heterogeneous Poisson null models to assess the roles of individual species and habitat heterogeneity in community assembly. We also calculated the neighbourhood species composition to quantify beta diversity turnover across different species groups. We observed that species richness, phylogenetic diversity and beta diversity all decreased from early- to mid- and late-successional species. Compared with homogeneous Poisson null model, early-successional trees had higher neighbourhood species but a lower phylogenetic diversity. Mid-successional trees showed no significant departure in richness and phylogenetic diversity from the null model. In contrast, late-successional trees had lower neighbourhood species richness and also a lower phylogenetic diversity than the null model. Both neighbourhood richness and phylogenetic diversity of all three species groups were well fitted by the heterogeneous Poisson model, indicating that environmental filtering predominated neighbourhood diversity. Our results underscore the importance of the early successional species in the accumulation of neighbourhood diversity and their contributions to diversity of plant communities. We suggest that secondary forests, which are mostly composed of early successional species, warrant a due attention in biodiversity conservation.

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