6 research outputs found
Trait drivers theory: A basis to integrate and scale from plant form, function and strategies to ecosystems worldwide
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<p>Background/Question/Methods
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<p>Aim: More powerful tests of biodiversity theories need to move beyond species richness and explicitly focus on
mechanisms generating diversity via trait composition. The rise of trait-based ecology has led to an increased
focus on the distribution and dynamics of traits across broad geographic and climatic gradients and how these
distributions influ- ence ecosystem function. However, a general theory of trait-based ecology, that can apply
across different scales (e.g. species that differ in size) and gradients (e.g. temperature), has yet to be
formulated. While research focused on metabolic and allometric scaling theory provides the basis for such a
theory, it does not explicitly account for differences in traits within and across taxa, such as variation in the
optimal temperature for growth.
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<p>Results/Conclusions
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<p>Here we synthesize trait-based and metabolic scaling approaches into a framework that we term ‘Trait Driver
Theory’ or TDT. It shows that the shape and dynamics of trait and size distributions can be linked to fundamental
drivers of community assembly and how the community will respond to future drivers. It provides a framework to
scale-up how variation in plant life history strategies worldwide influence ecosystem processes. To assess
predictions and assumptions of TDT, we review several theoretical studies and recent empirical studies spanning
local and biogeographic gradients. Further, we analyze how the shift in trait distributions influences ecosystem
processes across elevational gradients for both Alpine environemnts and tropical forests and a 140-year-long
ecological experiment. We show that TDT provides a baseline for (i) recasting the predictions of ecological
theories based on species richness in terms of the shape of trait distributions and (ii) integrating how specific
traits, including body size, and functional diversity then ‘scale up’ to influence ecosystem functioning and the
dynamics of species assemblages across climate gradients. Further, TDT offers a novel framework to integrate
trait, metabolic/allometric, and species-richness-based approaches to better predict functional biogeography and
how assemblages of species have and may respond to climate change. </p>
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data_amarasekare&savage_2012
Data on temperature responses of fecundity, mortality, development and intrinsic growth rat