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Ackerly, D.D. and Cornwell, S.K. (2007) A trait-based approach to community assembly: partitioning of species trait values into within- and among-community components. Ecology Letters 10: 135-145.

Year Published: 2007
Abstract: 

Plant functional traits vary both along environmental gradients and among species occupying similar conditions, creating a challenge for the synthesis of functional and community ecology. We present a trait-based approach that provides an additive decomposition of species-trait values into alpha and beta components: beta values refer to a species-position along a gradient defined by community-level mean trait values; alpha values are the difference between a species-trait values and the mean of co-occurring taxa. In woody plant communities of coastal California, beta trait values for specific leaf area, leaf size, wood density and maximum height all covary strongly, reflecting species distributions across a gradient of soil moisture availability. Alpha values, on the other hand, are generally not significantly correlated, suggesting several independent axes of differentiation within communities. This trait-based framework provides a novel approach to integrate functional ecology and gradient analysis with community ecology and coexistence theory.

Article Title: 
A trait-based approach to community assembly: partitioning of species trait values into within- and among-community components
Article ID: 
1075