Plant species accumulation curves are determined by evenness and spatial aggregation in drylands worldwide
Niv DeMalach, Hugo Saiz, Eli Zaady, Fernando T. Maestre

TL;DR
This study analyzes plant species accumulation curves in drylands worldwide, revealing that evenness and spatial aggregation are key factors influencing these curves and their parameters across diverse ecosystems.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the functional form and parameters of species accumulation curves are primarily determined by evenness and spatial aggregation in dryland plant communities.
Findings
Logarithmic functional form is most common for SAC.
Evenness influences the functional form of SAC.
Spatial aggregation largely determines SAC parameters.
Abstract
Species accumulation curves (SAC), i.e. the relationship between species richness and the number of sampling units in a given community, can be used to describe diversity patterns while accounting for the well-known scale-dependence of species richness. Despite their value, the functional form and the parameters of SAC, as well as their determinants, have barely been investigated in plant communities, particularly in drylands. We characterized the SAC of perennial plant communities from 233 dryland ecosystems from six continents by comparing the fit of major functions (power-law, logarithmic and Michaelis-Menten). We tested the theoretical prediction that the effects of aridity and soil pH on SAC are mediated by vegetation attributes such as evenness, cover, and spatial aggregation. We found that the logarithmic relationship was the most common functional form, followed by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Pasture and Agricultural Systems · Rangeland Management and Livestock Ecology
