Journal
ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages 153-163Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.12395
Keywords
Colonisation; community assembly; extinction; null model; phylogeny; speciation; traits
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Funding
- Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research through a VENI grant
- VIDI/VICI
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Phylogenies are increasingly applied to identify the mechanisms structuring ecological communities but progress has been hindered by a reliance on statistical null models that ignore the historical process of community assembly. Here, we address this, and develop a dynamic null model of assembly by allopatric speciation, colonisation and local extinction. Incorporating these processes fundamentally alters the structure of communities expected due to chance, with speciation leading to phylogenetic overdispersion compared to a classical statistical null model assuming equal probabilities of community membership. Applying this method to bird and primate communities in South America we show that patterns of phylogenetic overdispersion - often attributed to negative biotic interactions - are instead consistent with a species neutral model of allopatric speciation, colonisation and local extinction. Our findings provide a new null expectation for phylogenetic community patterns and highlight the importance of explicitly accounting for the dynamic history of assembly when testing the mechanisms governing community structure.
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