. Solar Energy News .




.
FLORA AND FAUNA
Jostling for position
by Staff Writers
Munich, Germany (SPX) Jan 31, 2012

File image.

Ecologists are still arguing about the nature of the factors that determine the species composition of ecological communities. On the one hand, there are those who view interspecies competition as the key element. A second group of influential ecologists postulates that random fluctuations in population structure and rates of species dispersal play the dominant role, particularly in the biological communities found in species-rich tropical rainforests.

LMU biologist Professor Susanne Renner, who is Director of the Botanic Garden and herbaria in Munich, and Professor Robert E. Ricklefs of the University of Missouri in St. Louis have now analyzed data from censuses of tree species in rainforests around the globe and also taken advantage of fossil evidence, allowing them to chart diversity in both space and time.

Their findings show that variation in species richness among families is very similar in all tropical forests in spite of millions of years of independent evolution and diversification.

This correspondence strongly suggests that community structure in rainforests cannot be attributed to the action of stochastic factors. "The high degree of similarity was a surprise even to us," says Renner. "The results can be regarded as a nail in the coffin of the neutral theory."

In even the best habitats, resources are inevitably limited. This means that species must compete with each other for access to them. And for many ecologists, interspecies competition for resources is the critical factor that determines the composition of the community found in a given environment.

According to the principle of competitive exclusion, two species that depend on the same vital resource or ecological niche for their survival cannot stably coexist. The better adapted species will ultimately displace its competitor.

In contrast, what is known as "neutral" theory postulates that stochastic variations in factors such as the rate of dispersal and extinction of species determine the patterns of species abundance in different communities. The American ecologist Stephen Hubbell is the leading proponent of neutral theory, which he developed to explain species-rich communities, such as tropical rainforests.

In these environments it is not uncommon to find hundreds of tree species growing close together. Hubbell contends that this makes it very unlikely that segregation of ecological niches and the principle of competitive exclusion are the overriding forces that determine community structure. His neutral theory has received a great deal of attention in recent years.

LMU biologist Professor Susanne Renner and her American colleague Professor Robert Ricklefs have now challenged the theory with the help of quantitative data. In Central and South American, African and Asian rainforests, the two researchers compared the abundance patterns of different tree species growing in plots of between 25 and 55 hectares.

In addition, they compared the relative abundance of different families of trees in a 55- to 65-year-old fossil flora from tropical Colombia with their representation there today.

On the basis of the neutral theory, which assigns a leading role to stochasticity, one would not expect to find much similarity in community structure over such a wide area and such a long span of time. However, the results of the new study show that when families are arranged in order of species richness, the rankings that emerge are very similar on all three continents.

"The correlation is statistically highly significant," says Renner. "So we have uncovered a very substantial degree of agreement between the seven forest plots; even the numbers of trees per unit area that belong to a given taxonomic family are similar in all three regions.

"Moreover, the families with the highest species diversity in the Colombian rainforests today were already dominant 50 million years ago. The findings are astonishingly clear-cut, and should suffice to rule out the neutral theory."

Global correlations in tropical tree species richness and abundance reject neutrality. Ricklefs, R. E.; and S. S. Renner. Science Express, 26. January 2012

Related Links
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



FLORA AND FAUNA
Attack or retreat? Circuit links hunger and pursuit in sea slug brain
Champaign, lL (SPX) Jan 31, 2012
If you were a blind, cannibalistic sea slug, living among others just like you, nearly every encounter with another creature would require a simple cost/benefit calculation: Should I eat that, do nothing or flee? In a new study, researchers report that these responses are linked to a simple circuit in the brain of the sea slug Pleurobranchaea. A heightened state of excitation in the neuron ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
Obey optimises bioenergy yield

Findings prove Miscanthus x giganteus has great potential as an alternative energy source

Bio architecture lab technology converts seaweed to renewable fuels and chemicals

US Woody Biomass Prices Have Dropped the Past Three Years

FLORA AND FAUNA
Robot competition in zero-gravity

JPL begins widespread adoption of Maplesoft technology

Snakes Improve Search-and-Rescue Robots

NASA Joins MIT and DARPA for Out-of-This-World Student Robotic Challenge

FLORA AND FAUNA
New style turbine to harvest wind energy

Natural Power appointed as Owner's Engineer on 20.5MW Sixpenny Wood wind farm

China voices 'deep concern' over US wind tower probe

Power generation is blowing in the wind

FLORA AND FAUNA
China subsidizing auto parts exporters: US industry

China targeting US auto parts sector: industry

Japan car sales rocket 40% on subsidy boost

Honda 9-month net profit falls 71%, cuts forecasts

FLORA AND FAUNA
All 25 Chinese workers kidnapped in Egypt freed

Romanian gas consumption hits record, increases imports

Oil prices fall in New York after weak US data

Iraq again delays energy exploration auction

FLORA AND FAUNA
France faces 79-bn-euro charge for nuclear power: auditor

UN atomic watchdog green lights Japan's reactor tests

How sea water could corrode nuclear fuel

Sandia chemists find new material to remove radioactive gas from spent nuclear fuel

FLORA AND FAUNA
US Military Sets Ambitious Environmental Goals

Japan emissions rising after atomic crisis: report

Mexican electricity output tied to growth

Backer: EU energy proposal has safeguards

FLORA AND FAUNA
Living on the edge: An innovative model of mangrove-hammock boundaries in Florida

Restored wetlands rarely equal condition of original wetlands

Rate of tropical timber harvest a concern

$1.6 million fine for cutting down trees


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement