Integrating succession and community assembly perspectives

F1000Res. 2016 Sep 12:5:F1000 Faculty Rev-2294. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.8973.1. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Succession and community assembly research overlap in many respects, such as through their focus on how ecological processes like dispersal, environmental filters, and biotic interactions influence community structure. Indeed, many recent advances have been made by successional studies that draw on modern analytical techniques introduced by contemporary community assembly studies. However, community assembly studies generally lack a temporal perspective, both on how the forces structuring communities might change over time and on how historical contingency (e.g. priority effects and legacy effects) and complex transitions (e.g. threshold effects) might alter community trajectories. We believe a full understanding of the complex interacting processes that shape community dynamics across large temporal scales can best be achieved by combining concepts, tools, and study systems into an integrated conceptual framework that draws upon both succession and community assembly theory.

Keywords: Succession; community assembly; dynamics.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

Funding provided by the University of Washington-Bothell to Cynthia Chang and University of Washington-Seattle to JannekeHilleRisLambers.