Evidence of limiting similarity revealed using a conservative assessment of coexistence

Abstract The concept of limiting similarity is important in ecology because it encapsulates the expectation under niche theory that differences among species are fundamental to coexistence. A growing body of research has tested for evidence of limiting similarity, but only a small number of studies...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brandon S. Schamp, Ashley M. Jensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-08-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2840
id doaj-93a311d1cdd946828d5097a3e46bbc12
record_format Article
spelling doaj-93a311d1cdd946828d5097a3e46bbc122020-11-25T02:35:53ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252019-08-01108n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.2840Evidence of limiting similarity revealed using a conservative assessment of coexistenceBrandon S. Schamp0Ashley M. Jensen1Department of Biology Algoma University 1520 Queen Street East Sault Ste. Marie Ontario P6A 2G4 CanadaDepartment of Biology Algoma University 1520 Queen Street East Sault Ste. Marie Ontario P6A 2G4 CanadaAbstract The concept of limiting similarity is important in ecology because it encapsulates the expectation under niche theory that differences among species are fundamental to coexistence. A growing body of research has tested for evidence of limiting similarity, but only a small number of studies have produced support. Here, using relevant field data, we highlight one possible explanation for the paucity of support for limiting similarity. We test whether coexisting plant species that share bees as pollinators flower asynchronously, a form of temporal niche separation consistent with limiting similarity. Our results provide evidence of limiting similarity, adding to the small collection of null modeling studies that have thus far done so. Our work also provides evidence that temporal niche variation may be an important niche axis that broadly contributes to species coexistence. Finally, we demonstrate that a more conservative assessment of coexistence that includes only individual plants that have achieved reproduction, is consequential in whether we find evidence of significant flowering asynchrony in this study. We conclude that the conservative approach to assessing coexistence that we present here can reduce noise in coexistence data, improving our power to test for evidence consistent with limiting similarity. Using this approach may or may not result in an increase in evidence supporting limiting similarity; however, it will certainly give researchers more confidence that they have not missed existing evidence of limiting similarity.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2840coexistencecommunity assembly ruleflowering asynchronylimiting similaritynull modeltemporal niche differentiation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brandon S. Schamp
Ashley M. Jensen
spellingShingle Brandon S. Schamp
Ashley M. Jensen
Evidence of limiting similarity revealed using a conservative assessment of coexistence
Ecosphere
coexistence
community assembly rule
flowering asynchrony
limiting similarity
null model
temporal niche differentiation
author_facet Brandon S. Schamp
Ashley M. Jensen
author_sort Brandon S. Schamp
title Evidence of limiting similarity revealed using a conservative assessment of coexistence
title_short Evidence of limiting similarity revealed using a conservative assessment of coexistence
title_full Evidence of limiting similarity revealed using a conservative assessment of coexistence
title_fullStr Evidence of limiting similarity revealed using a conservative assessment of coexistence
title_full_unstemmed Evidence of limiting similarity revealed using a conservative assessment of coexistence
title_sort evidence of limiting similarity revealed using a conservative assessment of coexistence
publisher Wiley
series Ecosphere
issn 2150-8925
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Abstract The concept of limiting similarity is important in ecology because it encapsulates the expectation under niche theory that differences among species are fundamental to coexistence. A growing body of research has tested for evidence of limiting similarity, but only a small number of studies have produced support. Here, using relevant field data, we highlight one possible explanation for the paucity of support for limiting similarity. We test whether coexisting plant species that share bees as pollinators flower asynchronously, a form of temporal niche separation consistent with limiting similarity. Our results provide evidence of limiting similarity, adding to the small collection of null modeling studies that have thus far done so. Our work also provides evidence that temporal niche variation may be an important niche axis that broadly contributes to species coexistence. Finally, we demonstrate that a more conservative assessment of coexistence that includes only individual plants that have achieved reproduction, is consequential in whether we find evidence of significant flowering asynchrony in this study. We conclude that the conservative approach to assessing coexistence that we present here can reduce noise in coexistence data, improving our power to test for evidence consistent with limiting similarity. Using this approach may or may not result in an increase in evidence supporting limiting similarity; however, it will certainly give researchers more confidence that they have not missed existing evidence of limiting similarity.
topic coexistence
community assembly rule
flowering asynchrony
limiting similarity
null model
temporal niche differentiation
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2840
work_keys_str_mv AT brandonsschamp evidenceoflimitingsimilarityrevealedusingaconservativeassessmentofcoexistence
AT ashleymjensen evidenceoflimitingsimilarityrevealedusingaconservativeassessmentofcoexistence
_version_ 1724802779337195520