The effects of ecological selection on species diversity and trait distribution: predictions and an empirical test
DeMalach Niv, Po-Ju Ke, Tadashi Fukami

TL;DR
This study develops a framework to infer the type and strength of ecological selection by analyzing species diversity and trait distribution, validated through simulations and an empirical test on plant communities.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel framework linking species diversity and trait distribution to infer ecological selection, validated with simulations and empirical data.
Findings
Directional selection reduces species diversity compared to stabilizing selection.
In productive habitats, strong directional selection favors large seeds.
Seed mass variation indicates niche partitioning in less productive habitats.
Abstract
Ecological selection is a major driver of community assembly. Selection is classified as stabilizing when species with intermediate trait values gain the highest reproductive success, whereas selection is considered directional when fitness is highest for species with extreme trait values. Previous studies have investigated the effects of different selection types on trait distribution, but the effects of selection on species diversity have remained unclear. Here, we propose a framework for inferring the type and strength of selection by studying species diversity and trait distribution together against null expectations. We use a simulation model to confirm our prediction that directional selection should lead to lower species diversity than stabilizing selection despite a similar effect on trait community-weighted variance. We apply the framework to a mesocosm system of annual plants…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Animal Ecology and Behavior Studies
