Beta-Nestedness and Turnover Reveal Drivers of Community Assembly in a
Regenerating sub-Tropical Forest
Abstract
Secondary forests represent significant proportions of global forest
cover, with over 65% of forests in Asia classified as regenerating.
While succession has been studied extensively in temperate systems,
trajectories of sub-tropical forest succession remain poorly
characterized in highly disturbed, urban-adjacent forests. Investigating
the additive beta diversity subcomponents of Turnover and Nestedness may
reveal community assembly mechanisms driving secondary succession. The
present study investigated plant community assembly along a successional
gradient from 7 to 70 years following the onset of succession in
secondary sub-tropical forests in Hong Kong. Plant survey data for 28
plots were analysed, generating additive Simpsons and Nestedness beta
diversity metrics as subcomponents of Sorenson Beta Diversity.
Dissimilarity matrices were generated and modelled as a function of
transformed environmental matrices of forest plant community age (years
following onset of secondary succession), elevation (metres),
inter-community distance (metres), soil moisture saturation (%) and
soil organic carbon (g kg-1). Generalized dissimilarity models were
generated for plant species Turnover and Nestedness. Nonmetric
Multidimensional Scaling of plant communities was conducted with
Bray-Curtis dissimilarity matrices. Our findings indicate that elevation
was the primary driver of plant species Turnover, while age and
inter-community distance played less prominent roles. Models of
Nestedness found that plot age and soil moisture saturation were the
sole drivers of Nestedness patterns in plant communities. While models
of Turnover were robust, the low explanatory power of Nestedness models
suggest additional unobserved factors driving patterns of plant
community Nestedness during secondary succession. Turnover patterns
suggest a deterministic model of community assembly, with strong
patterns of species replacement between Lowland and Montaine forest
types, as well as between successional age classes.