4.6 Article

plant: A package for modelling forest trait ecology and evolution

期刊

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 7, 期 2, 页码 136-146

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210X.12525

关键词

demography; emergent; fitness; growth; metapopulation; mortality; physiology; reproduction; size structure; trade-off

类别

资金

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DP110102086]
  2. Science and Industry Endowment Fund [RP04-174]
  3. Swedish Research Council Formas [2012-2008]
  4. European Commission
  5. European Science Foundation
  6. Austrian Science Fund
  7. Austrian Ministry of Science and Research
  8. Vienna Science and Technology Fund
  9. ARC

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Population dynamics in forests are strongly size-structured: larger plants shade smaller plants while also expending proportionately more energy on building and maintaining woody stems. Although the importance of size structure for demography is widely recognized, many models either omit it entirely or include only coarse approximations. Here, we introduce the plant package, an extensible framework for modelling size- and trait-structured demography, ecology and evolution in simulated forests. At its core, plant is an individual-based model where plant physiology and demography are mediated by traits. Individual plants from multiple species can be grown in isolation, in patches of competing plants or in metapopulations under a disturbance regime. These dynamics can be integrated into metapopulation-level estimates of invasion fitness and vegetation structure. Because fitness emerges as a function of traits, plant provides a novel arena for exploring eco-evolutionary dynamics. plant is an open source R package and is available at . Accessed from R, the core routines in plant are written in C++. The package provides for alternative physiologies and for capturing trade-offs among parameters. A detailed test suite is provided to ensure correct behaviour of the code. plant provides a transparent platform for investigating how physiological rules and functional trade-offs interact with competition and disturbance regimes to influence vegetation demography, structure and diversity.

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