Tail-dependence of masting synchrony results in continent-wide seed scarcity
Jakub Szymkowiak,
Jessie Foest,
Andrew Hacket-Pain
et al.
Abstract:Spatial synchrony is the tendency of spatially separated populations to display similar temporal fluctuations. Spatial synchrony may be tail-dependent, meaning it is stronger for peaks rather than troughs, or vice versa. High interannual variation in seed production in perennial plants, called masting, can be synchronized at subcontinental scales. Resulting resource pulses and periods of seed scarcity have important but distinct ecosystem consequences that are amplified by their scale of synchrony. In this stu… Show more
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