2017
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-017-3863-y
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Measuring the demographic impact of conspecific negative density dependence

Abstract: consequently, mortality associated with CNDD. This mechanism allows rare species to avoid a disadvantage-whenrare that would, all else equal, result from stronger CNDD in rare species. Our work provides empirical support for a resolution to the apparently paradoxical findings that rare species experience stronger CNDD and may help reconcile contrasting findings for the relationship between the CNDD strength and abundance.

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Cited by 23 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…For example, Bagchi et al (2014) used a multi-trap design to quantify CNDD affecting the seed-to-seedling transition. The results in Bagchi et al (2014) dramatically differ from the results in H2000 and subsequent analyses (Wright et al 2005;Fricke & Wright 2017), as the former detected CNDD in few species only, whereas the latter reported CNDD in all the species. This can be explained by the multi-trap design's ability to correct for bias, which is consistent with our re-analysis of the data set used by H2000 informed by a newly available multi-trap estimate of collocation error ( Fig.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 81%
“…For example, Bagchi et al (2014) used a multi-trap design to quantify CNDD affecting the seed-to-seedling transition. The results in Bagchi et al (2014) dramatically differ from the results in H2000 and subsequent analyses (Wright et al 2005;Fricke & Wright 2017), as the former detected CNDD in few species only, whereas the latter reported CNDD in all the species. This can be explained by the multi-trap design's ability to correct for bias, which is consistent with our re-analysis of the data set used by H2000 informed by a newly available multi-trap estimate of collocation error ( Fig.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 81%
“…2c). SSMs provide insights on dispersal and recruitment limitation (Ribbens et al 1994, Clark et al 1998, Nathan and Muller-Landau 2000, Fricke and Wright 2017, gene flow and hybridization (Garant et al 2007, Jones and Muller-Landau 2008, Moran and Clark 2011, Moran et al 2012, migration potential , environmental controls on reproductive effort and sex ratio (Clark et al 2004, 2011, Uriarte et al 2005, 2012, Schurr et al 2008, Martinez and Gonzalez-Taboada 2009, Canham et al 2014, Detto et al 2018, and allocation (LaDeau and Clark 2006, Berdanier and. SSMs include a likelihood for seed-count data, such as a Poisson distribution with intensity expressed as expected seeds per trap…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Differences in the relative strength of CNDD regulation between common and rare species have been proposed to have an important effect on tree diversity and species composition (Comita et al., ; Hubbell, Ahumada, Condit & Foster, ; Miranda et al., ; Stump & Comita, ). Fricke and Wright () argue that in tropical forests, dominant tree species are expected to have weaker CNDD. The lack of CNDD regulation in Q. costaricensis correlates with its high abundance in montane forests and may result from different interacting life‐history traits (Comita et al., ; Zhu et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%