Seed banks alter metacommunity diversity: the interactive effects of competition, germination, and survival

Nathan I. Wisnoski,Lauren G. Shoemaker

Published 2021 in bioRxiv

ABSTRACT

Dispersal and dormancy are two common strategies allowing for species persistence and the maintenance of ecological diversity in variable environments. However, theory and empirical tests of spatial diversity patterns tend to examine either mechanism in isolation. Here, we developed a stochastic, spatially explicit metacommunity model incorporating seed banks with varying germination and survival rates. We found that dormancy and dispersal had interactive, nonlinear effects on the maintenance and distribution of metacommunity diversity, where scale-dependent effects of seed banks were modified by local competitive interactions and dispersal. The interplay between seed germination and survival regulated the benefits of seed banks for diversity. Our study shows that the role of seed banks depends critically on spatial processes, and that classic predictions for how dispersal affects metacommunity diversity can be strongly influenced by dormancy. Together, these results highlight the need to consider both temporal and spatial storage when predicting multi-scale patterns of diversity.

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