Question: A major obstacle to understanding non-random patterns in plant traits (over-dispersion or under-dispersion) has been our limited knowledge of trait-demography relationships for large sets of species. Here, we suggest that some of the needed data on demographic processes can be gathered from growth records on plants in botanical gardens.
We examine within-community patterns in demographic responses determined from such growth records, and ask whether they are different from patterns in plant traits. Location: Czech Republic.
Methods: We assembled data on seed and vegetative reproduction for ca. 1000 Central European species from the Botanical Garden of Charles University in Prague. We used these data as estimates of potential vegetative and seed reproduction of individual species under favourable conditions.
We linked these data with co-occurrence data from the Czech National Phytosociological Database and with data on major species traits. We examined dispersion of both species traits and garden reproduction using randomization tests on the data set as a whole and on the data stratified using EUNIS classification into seven or 32 habitat types.
Results: The patterns found for species traits and for garden reproduction are similar, with strong under-dispersion for the data set as a whole and diminishing under-dispersion in subsets of the data. Under-dispersion was much stronger for traits than for garden reproduction.
No over-dispersion was detected in either trait or garden reproduction data. Conclusions: The major source of the pattern in the data is environmental filtering.
Stronger filtering for traits indicates that the linkage between environment and traits is much tighter than that between environment and demography. In ecologically homogeneous communities, reproduction parameters are closer than trait values to a random distribution, indicating that co-existence of species are not limited by either similarities or differences in their demography.