Priority effects transcend scales and disciplines in biology

Publication date

2024-07

Authors

Stroud, J.T.
Delory, Benjamin M.ORCID 0000-0002-1190-8060ISNI 0000000518044500
Barnes, E.M.
Chase, J.M.
Meester, L. De
Dieskau, J.
Grainger, T.N.
Halliday, F.W.
Kardol, P.
Knight, T.M.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Although primarily studied through the lens of community ecology, phenomena consistent with priority effects appear to be widespread across many different scenarios spanning a broad range of spatial, temporal, and biological scales. However, communication between these research fields is inconsistent and has resulted in a fragmented co-citation landscape, likely due to the diversity of terms used to refer to priority effects across these fields. We review these related terms, and the biological contexts in which they are used, to facilitate greater cross-disciplinary cohesion in research on priority effects. In breaking down these semantic barriers, we aim to provide a framework to better understand the conditions and mechanisms of priority effects, and their consequences across spatial and temporal scales.

Keywords

alternative stable states, biotic interactions, community assembly, historical contingency, priority effects, stochasticity, Taverne

Citation

Stroud, J T, Delory, B M, Barnes, E M, Chase, J M, Meester, L D, Dieskau, J, Grainger, T N, Halliday, F W, Kardol, P, Knight, T M, Ladouceur, E, Little, C J, Roscher, C, Sarneel, J M, Temperton, V M, Steijn, T L H V, Werner, C M, Wood, C W & Fukami, T 2024, 'Priority effects transcend scales and disciplines in biology', Trends in ecology & evolution, vol. 39, no. 7, pp. 677-688. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2024.02.004