@article{NaafWulf2012, author = {Naaf, Tobias and Wulf, Monika}, title = {Plant community assembly in temperate forests along gradients of soil fertility and disturbance}, series = {Acta oecologica : international journal of ecology}, volume = {39}, journal = {Acta oecologica : international journal of ecology}, number = {2}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Paris}, issn = {1146-609X}, doi = {10.1016/j.actao.2012.01.009}, pages = {101 -- 108}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Plant community assembly from a regional pool is largely driven by two mechanisms: environmental filtering and niche partitioning, which result in trait convergence or divergence, respectively. Although empirical evidence for both assembly mechanisms exists, the environmental conditions and traits where each of the two assembly patterns is prevalent remain unclear. We studied community assembly mechanisms in herb layer communities of temperate forest patches in NW Germany, looking at distributions of competitive and reproductive traits along gradients of soil fertility and disturbance. We also examined how community assembly patterns changed over a time span of two decades. Canopy height converged toward taller species with increasing soil fertility and increasing light availability. Most reproductive traits diverged with an increasing degree of disturbance and with increasing fertility. Comparisons over time indicated that disturbance events induced the coexistence of species with different reproductive strategies and also selected for tall species as a result of enhanced competitive pressure. Our study demonstrates that in accordance with existing hypotheses, competitive traits (e.g., canopy height) can be convergent in favorable environments. However, this convergence is associated with a divergence of traits related to other challenges (e.g., reproduction), indicating that true functional redundancy within communities does not exist. Moreover, our study shows that the expected divergence of reproductive traits at disturbed sites can be accompanied by a convergence of other traits (e.g., canopy height), indicating that several assembly mechanisms can operate simultaneously.}, language = {en} }