are trade-offs among species’ ecological interactions scale dependent a test using pitcher-plant inquiline species是相互关联的物种的生态相互作用规模依赖测试使用猪笼草寄居动物物种.pdfVIP

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are trade-offs among species’ ecological interactions scale dependent a test using pitcher-plant inquiline species是相互关联的物种的生态相互作用规模依赖测试使用猪笼草寄居动物物种.pdf

are trade-offs among species’ ecological interactions scale dependent a test using pitcher-plant inquiline species是相互关联的物种的生态相互作用规模依赖测试使用猪笼草寄居动物物种

Are Trade-Offs Among Species’ Ecological Interactions Scale Dependent? A Test Using Pitcher-Plant Inquiline Species Jamie M. Kneitel* Department of Biological Sciences, California State University, Sacramento, Sacramento, California, United States of America Abstract Trade-offs among species’ ecological interactions is a pervasive explanation for species coexistence. The traits associated with trade-offs are typically measured to mechanistically explain species coexistence at a single spatial scale. However, species potentially interact at multiple scales and this may be reflected in the traits among coexisting species. I quantified species’ ecological traits associated with the trade-offs expected at both local (competitive ability and predator tolerance) and regional (competitive ability and colonization rate) community scales. The most common species (four protozoa and a rotifer) from the middle trophic level of a pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea) inquiline community were used to link species traits to previously observed patterns of species diversity and abundance. Traits associated with trade-offs (competitive ability, predator tolerance, and colonization rate) and other ecological traits (size, growth rate, and carrying capacity) were measured for each of the focal species. Traits were correlated with one another with a negative relationship indicative of a trade-off. Protozoan and rotifer species exhibited a negative relationship between competitive ability and predator tolerance, indicative of coexistence at the local community scale. There was no relationship between competitive ability and colonization rate. Size, growth rate, and carrying capacity were correlated with each other and the trade-off traits: Size was related to both competitive ability and predator tolerance, but growth rate and

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