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Journal Articles Ecology Letters Year : 2024

The unexpected influence of legacy conspecific density dependence

Lukas Magee
Joseph Lamanna
Robert W. Howe
  • Function : Author
Denis Valle
Daniel J. B. Smith
Robert Bagchi
Daniel J. Johnson

Abstract

When plants die, neighbours escape competition. Living conspecifics could disproportionately benefit because they are freed from negative intraspecific processes; however, if the negative effects of past conspecific neighbours persist, other species might be advantaged, and diversity might be maintained through legacy effects. We examined legacy effects in a mapped forest by modelling the survival of 37,212 trees of 23 species using four neighbourhood properties: living conspecific, living heterospecific, legacy conspecific (dead conspecifics) and legacy heterospecific densities. Legacy conspecific effects proved nearly four times stronger than living conspecific effects; changes in annual survival associated with legacy conspecific density were 1.5% greater than living conspecific effects. Over 90% of species were negatively impacted by legacy conspecific density, compared to 47% by living conspecific density. Our results emphasize that legacies of trees alter community dynamics, revealing that prior research may have underestimated the strength of density dependent interactions by not considering legacy effects.
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Dates and versions

hal-04631348 , version 1 (02-07-2024)

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Lukas Magee, Joseph Lamanna, Amy Wolf, Robert W. Howe, Yuanming Lu, et al.. The unexpected influence of legacy conspecific density dependence. Ecology Letters, 2024, 27 (6), ⟨10.1111/ele.14449⟩. ⟨hal-04631348⟩
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