Unexpected productivity and invasion resistance from plant communities
assembled from allopatric populations
Abstract
Species with shared geographic history may co-evolve, with interactions
leading to niche differentiation and improved resource capture. Thus,
plant communities assembled from sympatric sources (shared geographic
origins) are predicted to be more productive and invasion resistant than
those from allopatric sources (different origins), even with identical
species composition. We compared performance among communities of four
species from 15 locations, assembled from allopatric or sympatric
sources. Unexpectedly, allopatric-sourced communities had 29-35% more
inflorescences, 19% higher survival, 19% longer growing season,
26-53% greater size, and 108% lower invader biomass than
sympatric-sources. Sympatric populations showed trait convergence
consistent with strong environmental selection, with trait variation
higher in allopatric communities. Variation was associated with higher
productivity and invasion resistance, suggesting an advantage of
allopatric sources for community reassembly when environmental filters
are strong. These findings challenge assumptions about the advantages of
shared origins and have implications for understanding competition,
community assembly, and ecosystem restoration.