Author:
Tilman David,Lehman Clarence
Abstract
Human-caused environmental changes are creating regional
combinations of environmental conditions that, within the next 50 to
100 years, may fall outside the envelope within which many of the
terrestrial plants of a region evolved. These environmental
modifications might become a greater cause of global species extinction
than direct habitat destruction. The environmental constraints
undergoing human modification include levels of soil nitrogen,
phosphorus, calcium and pH, atmospheric CO2, herbivore,
pathogen, and predator densities, disturbance regimes, and climate.
Extinction would occur because the physiologies, morphologies, and life
histories of plants limit each species to being a superior competitor
for a particular combination of environmental constraints. Changes in
these constraints would favor a few species that would competitively
displace many other species from a region. In the long-term, the
“weedy” taxa that became the dominants of the novel conditions
imposed by global change should become the progenitors of a series of
new species that are progressively less weedy and better adapted to the
new conditions. The relative importance of evolutionary versus
community ecology responses to global environmental change would depend
on the extent of regional and local recruitment limitation, and on
whether the suite of human-imposed constraints were novel just
regionally or on continental or global scales.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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