2023
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.14198
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Nothing lasts forever: Dominant species decline under rapid environmental change in global grasslands

Peter A. Wilfahrt,
Eric W. Seabloom,
Jonathan D. Bakker
et al.

Abstract: Dominance often indicates one or a few species being best suited for resource capture and retention in a given environment. Press perturbations that change availability of limiting resources can restructure competitive hierarchies, allowing new species to capture or retain resources and leaving once dominant species fated to decline. However, dominant species may maintain high abundances even when their new environments no longer favour them due to stochastic processes associated with their high abundance, imp… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Although much of the empirical evidence discussed here relates to the removal of highly abundant invasive species, our conceptual framework can also be used to understand the influence of historical contingencies during continuous population declines (but see Wilfahrt et al. (2023) and Zavaleta and Hulvey (2004) for examples on abundant species losses), since the mechanisms underlying inverse priority effects can operate over longer time spans, and species’ population may exhibit contrasting abundances locally while declining at regional or global scale.…”
Section: Applied Implications Of Inverse Priority Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although much of the empirical evidence discussed here relates to the removal of highly abundant invasive species, our conceptual framework can also be used to understand the influence of historical contingencies during continuous population declines (but see Wilfahrt et al. (2023) and Zavaleta and Hulvey (2004) for examples on abundant species losses), since the mechanisms underlying inverse priority effects can operate over longer time spans, and species’ population may exhibit contrasting abundances locally while declining at regional or global scale.…”
Section: Applied Implications Of Inverse Priority Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%