Environmental heterogeneity, bird-mediated directed dispersal, and oak woodland dynamics in Mediterranean Spain
Authors
Rey Benayas, José MaríaIdentifiers
Permanent link (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10017/21393DOI: 10.1890/05-1923
ISSN: 0012-9615
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Date
2007Bibliographic citation
Ecological Monographs, 2007, v. 77, n. 1, p. 77-97
Keywords
Biogeography
Climate change
Climate Envelope
Corvids
Dispersal Limitation
Garrulus
Holm Oak
Iberian Peninsular
Incidence Function
Patch Model
Species Migration
Zoochory
Project
REN2000-745 (Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología)
REN2002-04041-C02-02/GLO (Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología)
Document type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Publisher's version
http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/05-1923Rights
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
© Ecological Society of America, 2007
Access rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Abstract
Vegetation dynamics in complex landscapes depend on interactions among
environmental heterogeneity, disturbance, habitat fragmentation, and seed dispersal
processes. We explore how these features combine to affect the regional abundances and
distributions of three Quercus (oak) species in central Spain: Q. faginea (deciduous tree), Q.
ilex (evergreen tree), and Q. coccifera (evergreen shrub). We develop and parameterize a
stochastic patch occupancy model (SPOM) that, unlike previous SPOMs, includes
environmentally driven variation in disturbance and establishment. Dispersal in the model
is directed toward local (nearby) suitable habitat patches, following the observed seed-caching
behavior of the European Jay. Model parameters were estimated using Bayesian methods and
survey data from 12 047 plots. Model simulations were conducted to explore the importance of
different dispersal modes (local directed, global directed, local random, global random). The
SPOM with local directed dispersal gave a much better fit to the data and reproduced observed
regional abundance, abundance–environment correlations, and spatial autocorrelation in
abundance for all three species. Model simulations suggest that jay-mediated directed dispersal
increases regional abundance and alters species–environment correlations. Local dispersal is
estimated to reduce regional abundances, amplify species–environment correlations, and
amplify spatial autocorrelation.
Parameter estimates and model simulations reveal important species-specific differences in
sensitivity to environmental perturbations and dispersal mode. The dominant species Q. ilex is
estimated to be highly fecund, but on the edge of its climatic tolerance. Therefore Q. ilex gains
little from directed dispersal, suffers little from local dispersal, and is relatively insensitive to
changes in habitat cover or disturbance rate; but Q. ilex is highly sensitive to altered drought
length. In contrast, the rarest species, Q. coccifera, is well adapted to the climate and soils but
has low fecundity; thus, it is highly sensitive to changes in dispersal, habitat cover, and
disturbance but insensitive to altered drought length. Finally, Q. faginea is estimated to be
both at the edge of its climatic tolerance and to have low fecundity, making it sensitive to all
perturbations. Apparently, co-occurring species can exhibit very different interactions among
dispersal, environmental characteristics, and physiological tolerances, calling for increased
attention to species-specific dynamics in determining regional vegetation responses to
anthropogenic perturbations.
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