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Plants defend themselves from herbivory by either reducing damage (resistance) or minimizing its negative fitness effects with compensatory growth (tolerance). Herbivore pressure can fluctuate from year to year in an early secondary successional community, which can create temporal variation in selection for defence traits. We manipulated insect herbivory and successional age of the community as agents of natural selection in replicated common gardens with the perennial herb . In these genotypic selection experiments, herbivory consistently selected for better defended plants in both successional communities. Herbivore suppression increased plant survival and the probability of flowering only in mid-succession. Despite these substantial differences in the effects of herbivory between early and mid-succession, the selection on defence traits did not change. Succession affected selection only on aboveground biomass, with positive selection in early but not mid-succession, suggesting an important role of competition in the selective environment. These results demonstrate that changes in the community that affect key life-history traits in an individual species can occur over very short timescales in a dynamic secondary successional environment. The resulting community context-driven variation in natural selection may be an important, yet overlooked, contributor to adaptive mosaics across populations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2022.2458 | DOI Listing |
Glob Chang Biol
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Lake and Watershed Science for Water Security, Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, People's Republic of China.
Succession has been a central theme of ecology for over a century, yet the patterns and drivers of soil microbial succession remain less well understood. Here, we analyzed the raw sequencing data of 5184 soil samples involving microbial succession, including primary succession, forest and grassland secondary succession. We provide the first evidence that the β-diversity (β-total, compositional dissimilarity between communities) of soil bacterial and fungal communities both decreased significantly with successional age in the three successional types.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
July 2025
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Etnobiologia e Conservação da Natureza, Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco, Recife, Pernambuco, 52171-900, Brazil.
The increasing conversion of secondary forests into anthropogenic areas, such as croplands, pastures, or homegardens, has been the focus of ecological studies investigating the impacts of human activities on biodiversity. Ethnobiological studies suggest that environmental changes influence the selection of useful plants by local communities, especially in landscapes transformed into mosaics of forests of different ages, affecting their repertoires of useful plants. This study investigated how forest age (early forest, young forest, and mature forest) influenced the richness, composition, versatility, utilitarian redundancy, and the functional trait dimension of plants known to be useful by rural communities, in areas of Cerrado transitioning to Caatinga, in Northeast Brazil.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOecologia
June 2025
Biology Department, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Universidad Del Rosario, Bogotá, Colombia.
Litter decomposability has been linked to "soft" traits of green leaves, but relationships with "hard" traits associated with leaf anatomy remain unexplored. Examining anatomical traits within the leaf economic spectrum may enhance our understanding of litter decomposability. In this study, we analyzed the relationships between leaf anatomical traits and decomposability at both species and community levels along a successional gradient of upper Andean tropical forests in Colombia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
June 2025
Department of Agronomy, Food, Natural Resources, Animals and Environment (DAFNAE) University of Padova Legnaro Italy.
Forest windthrows have generally a positive effect on the biodiversity of understory vegetation and on insects associated with open conditions, such as pollinators. However, the early successional stage after forest disturbances can be highly heterogeneous in both space and time. While most of the available literature has focused on finding spatial patterns of biodiversity in relation to the disturbed environment, few studies have measured the temporal changes occurring in wind-affected forests, especially within the early successional stage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuan Jing Ke Xue
May 2025
College of Agronomy, Northwest A&F University, Yangling 712100, China.
Soil extracellular enzymes are regulated by a range of biotic and abiotic factors, such as soil moisture and nutrients. In vegetation restoration, due to the heterogeneity of ecosystems and vertical spatial environments of soils, the differences in the response of soil surface and substrate enzyme activities to different stages of succession and the driving mechanisms are unclear. Therefore, using the method of "space instead of time," we analyzed the characteristics of four extracellular enzymes and their influencing factors in the soil surface and bottom layers during the succession of secondary forests in loess hilly areas.
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