Functional traits explain variation in plant life history strategies
Utah State University · Max Planck Society · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Ecologists seek general explanations for the dramatic variation in species abundances in space and time. An increasingly popular solution is to predict species distributions, dynamics, and responses to environmental change based on easily measured anatomical and morphological traits. Trait-based approaches assume that simple functional traits influence fitness and life history evolution, but rigorous tests of this assumption are lacking, because they require quantitative information about the full lifecycles of many species representing different life histories. Here, we link a global traits database with empirical matrix population models for 222 species and report strong relationships between functional…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
7- PBPeter B. AdlerCorresponding
Utah State University
- RSRoberto Salguero‐Gómez
Max Planck Society, The University of Queensland, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
- ACAldo Compagnoni
Utah State University
- JSJoanna S. Hsu
University of California, Berkeley
- JRJayanti Ray‐Mukherjee
University of KwaZulu-Natal
Topics & keywords
- Trait
- Biology
- Life history theory
- Population
- Life history
- Vital rates
- Ecology
- Genetic Fitness
- Life in Land