RecruitNet: A global database of plant recruitment networks
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Verdú, Miguel; Garrido, José Luis; Bastida, Jesús M.; Lendínez, Sandra; López García, Álvaro; Prieto Rubio, Jorge; Rey, Pedro J.; Zamora Rodríguez, Regino JesúsEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Ecological networks Facilitation Plant–plant interactions Recruitment Replacement
Date
2022-11-25Referencia bibliográfica
Verdú, Miguel... [et al.]. 2023. “ RecruitNet: A Global Database of Plant Recruitment Networks.” Ecology 104( 2): e3923. [https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3923]
Sponsorship
Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional, Grant/Award Number; ICTS-2017-08-CSIC-4; SUMHAL; Grant/Award Numbers: 418RT0555, 501100011033; LIFEWATCH-2019-09-CSIC-13, MCIN/ AEI/10.13039, PGC2018-100966-B-100, PID2020-113157GB-I00, POPE 2014-2020Abstract
Plant recruitment interactions (i.e., what recruits under what) shape the
composition, diversity, and structure of plant communities. Despite the huge
body of knowledge on the mechanisms underlying recruitment interactions
among species, we still know little about the structure of the recruitment
networks emerging in ecological communities. Modeling and analyzing the
community-level structure of plant recruitment interactions as a complex network
can provide relevant information on ecological and evolutionary processes
acting both at the species and ecosystem levels. We report a data set
containing 143 plant recruitment networks in 23 countries across five continents,
including temperate and tropical ecosystems. Each network identifies
the species under which another species recruits. All networks report the number
of recruits (i.e., individuals) per species. The data set includes >850,000
recruiting individuals involved in 118,411 paired interactions among 3318 vascular
plant species across the globe. The cover of canopy species and open
ground is also provided. Three sampling protocols were used: (1) The
Recruitment Network (RN) protocol (106 networks) focuses on interactions
among established plants (“canopy species”) and plants in their early stages of
recruitment (“recruit species”). A series of plots was delimited within a locality,
and all the individuals recruiting and their canopy species were identified;
(2) The paired Canopy-Open (pCO) protocol (26 networks) consists in locating
a potential canopy plant and identifying recruiting individuals under the canopy
and in a nearby open space of the same area; (3) The Georeferenced plot
(GP) protocol (11 networks) consists in using information from georeferenced
individual plants in large plots to infer canopy-recruit interactions. Some networks
incorporate data for both herbs and woody species, whereas others
focus exclusively on woody species. The location of each study site, geographical
coordinates, country, locality, responsible author, sampling dates, sampling
method, and life habits of both canopy and recruit species are provided. This
database will allow researchers to test ecological, biogeographical, and evolutionary
hypotheses related to plant recruitment interactions. There are no
copyright restrictions on the data set; please cite this data paper when using
these data in publications.