Plant-plant interactions and coexistence

Investigating how higher-order interactions and facilitation shape coexistence in natural plant communities


Project Summary

Understanding how many species coexist is a central question in ecology. Central to most modern coexistence models are interactions among species. Most models of coexistence, however, assume that only direct competitive effects are important, and they exclude facilitation and more complex species interactions. The empirical literature tells us, however, that there are a wide range of common important species interactions that occur within natural communities, thus to predict and explain the coexistence dynamics that we see in nature, it is important to add more realistic representations of species interactions into our coexistence models. In this project we are exploring a range of species interactions with each other and the environment with the goal of improving our ability to predict and detect coexistence dynamics in natural plant communities. We employ a wide range of approaches but much of our work falls within the modern coexistence framework and our field studies are expanding on Mayfield and Stouffer 2017, which presents a novel framework for incorporating facilitation and non-additive higher-order interactions into coexistence models. Primarily we aim to develop and test new approaches for detecting and explaining observed coexistence dynamics in real plant communities, using the York Gum woodlands of SW Western Australia as our focal system.

Students working on this research topic are exploring topics including:
  • Spatial dynamics of non-additive higher order interactions
  • The role of the environment in mediating coexistence dynamics
  • The indirect effects of pollinators in mediating fitness outcomes
  • Intransitivity
  • The role of functional traits in determining the impacts species have on each other

Project Collaborators

Margie Mayfield
University of Melbourne

Daniel Stouffer
University of Canterbury

Lauren Shoemaker
University of Wyoming

Christopher Weiss-Lehman
University of Wyoming

Oscar Godoy
University of Cadiz

Lauren Hallett
University of Oregon

Post-doc

https://images.nature.com/m685/nature-assets/natecolevol/2017/s41559-016-0062/images_hires/s41559-016-0062-f1.jpg