Shared preferences along stress gradients: how a growth-tolerance
trade-off drives unimodal diversity and trait lumping
- Torben Schucht,
- Bernd Blasius
Abstract
Environmental gradients are pervasive across ecosystems and play a
fundamental role in structuring species distributions and community
dynamics. While ecological theory mainly focused on species with
distinct preferences for specific niches along the gradient, many
natural communities follow an alternative pattern of shared preferences.
In such systems, all species prefer the same optimal conditions but
differ in their tolerance to harsher environments, according to a
growth-tolerance trade-off. Here, we develop a trait-based metacommunity
model, based on integrodifference equations, to investigate the
development of community structure along a one- dimensional stress
gradient with shared preferences. We demonstrate how species
interactions, driven by competition, dispersal, and a growth-tolerance
trade-off lead to the emergence of patterns such as unimodal diversity
distributions and trait lumping. Our model provides a conceptual
framework for exploring the processes that shape metacommunities across
spatial gradients characterized by shared preferences, offering new
insights into this underrepresented class of ecological systems.