Sink populations decouple species occupancy and persistence across a
productivity gradient
Abstract
For decades community ecology has examined empirical relationships
between ecosystem productivity and diversity. Despite this long history,
tests of hypothesized mechanisms, namely the interplay between
environmental filtering, biotic interactions, and dispersal, are
lacking, largely due to their intractability using traditional
approaches. Across a productivity gradient in a serpentine grassland in
California, USA, we coupled occupancy data for four annual plants with
persistence measures of paired transplants under natural conditions and
reduced biotic interactions with neighbors. We found a positive
relationship between productivity and biodiversity (i.e., the proportion
of our four focal species found in a location) despite strong
competition limiting species persistence in productive environments.
Additionally, across species and for the community, we found a strong
mismatch between occupancy and persistence, largely due to dispersal
excess. Our results suggest that biodiversity-productivity relationships
can be largely driven by dispersal and its interactive effects with
local biotic and abiotic conditions.