Multiscale phenological niches of seed fall in diverse Amazonian plant communities

Author:

Pak Damie1ORCID,Swamy Varun2,Alvarez‐Loayza Patricia3,Cornejo‐Valverde Fernando4,Queenborough Simon A.5,Metz Margaret R.6ORCID,Terborgh John7,Valencia Renato8,Wright S. Joseph9ORCID,Garwood Nancy C.10,Lasky Jesse R.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology Pennsylvania State University State College Pennsylvania USA

2. San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservation Research Escondido California USA

3. Duke University Hospitals Durham North Carolina USA

4. Proyecto Castaña Puerto Maldonado Peru

5. Yale School of the Environment Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

6. Department of Biology Lewis & Clark College Portland Oregon USA

7. Center for Tropical Conservation, Nicholas School of the Environment Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

8. Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador Quito Ecuador

9. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Panama City Republic of Panama

10. School of Biological Sciences Southern Illinois University Carbondale Carbondale Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractPhenology has long been hypothesized as an avenue for niche partitioning or interspecific facilitation, both promoting species coexistence. Tropical plant communities exhibit striking diversity in reproductive phenology, but many are also noted for large synchronous reproductive events. Here we study whether the phenology of seed fall in such communities is nonrandom, the temporal scales of phenological patterns, and ecological factors that drive reproductive phenology. We applied multivariate wavelet analysis to test for phenological synchrony versus compensatory dynamics (i.e., antisynchronous patterns where one species' decline is compensated by the rise of another) among species and across temporal scales. We used data from long‐term seed rain monitoring of hyperdiverse plant communities in the western Amazon. We found significant synchronous whole‐community phenology at multiple timescales, consistent with shared environmental responses or positive interactions among species. We also observed both compensatory and synchronous phenology within groups of species (confamilials) likely to share traits and seed dispersal mechanisms. Wind‐dispersed species exhibited significant synchrony at ~6‐month scales, suggesting these species might share phenological niches to match the seasonality of wind. Our results suggest that community phenology is shaped by shared environmental responses but that the diversity of tropical plant phenology may partly result from temporal niche partitioning. The scale‐specificity and time‐localized nature of community phenology patterns highlights the importance of multiple and shifting drivers of phenology.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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