Abstract

The relationship between niche and distribution, and especially the role of biotic interactions in shaping species' geographic distributions, has gained increasing interest in the last two decades. Most ecological research has focused on negative species interactions, especially competition, predation and parasitism. Yet the relevance of positive interactions – mutualisms and commensalisms – have been brought to the fore in recent years by an increasing number of empirical studies exploring their impact on range limits. Based on a review of 73 studies from a Web of Science search, we found strong evidence that positive interactions can influence the extent of species' geographic or ecological ranges through a diversity of mechanisms. More specifically, we found that while obligate interactions, and especially obligate mutualisms, tend to constrain the ranges of one or both partners, facultative positive interactions tend to widen ranges. Nonetheless, there was more variation in effects of facultative interactions on range limits, pointing to important context‐dependencies. Therefore, we propose that conceptual development in this field will come from studying ecological interactions in the context of networks of many species across environmental gradients, since pairwise interactions alone might overlook the indirect and environmentally‐contingent effects that species have on each other in communities of many interacting species. Finally, our study also revealed key data gaps that limit our current understanding of the pervasiveness of effects that positive interactions have on species' ranges, highlighting potential avenues for future theoretical and experimental work.

Highlights

  • Understanding the mechanims shaping species’ geographic range limits constitutes one of ecology’s great challenges (Grinnell 1917, Elton 1927, Hutchinson 1957)

  • The studies we reviewed indicated that, they differed in levels of support, both facultative mutualisms and commensalisms can influence a species’ range through a similar set of mechanisms, primarily through transport of propagules, ameliorating environmental conditions, or resource/habitat provisioning

  • The hypothesis that positive interactions contribute to setting range limits or affect range expansion was supported by 12/37 studies dealing with facultative mutualisms, and 14/20 studies of facultative commensalisms (Fig. 3, Table 1)

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Summary

Journal Article

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ETH Library
Introduction
Literature review
Obligate interactions tend to constrain ranges
Plant and mycorrhiza Nesting association
Facultative interactions tend to extend ranges
Habitat suitability and resource provisioning
Mitigation of consumer pressure
From positive interactions to networks of interactions
The distribution of positive interactions
Data gaps
Reporting bias
Conclusions
Findings
Author contributions
Full Text
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