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Abstract. Assembly rules provide one possible unifying framework for community ecology. Given a species pool, and measured traits for each species, the objective is to specify which traits (and therefore which subset of species) will occur in a particular environment. Because the problem primarily involves traits and environments, answers should be generalizable to systems with very different taxonomic composition. In this context, the environment functions like a filter (or sieve) removing all species lacking specified combinations of traits. In this way, assembly rules are a community level analogue of natural selection. Response rules follow a similar process except that they transform a vector of species abundances to a new vector using the same information. Examples already exist from a range of habitats, scales, and kinds of organisms.
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Paul A. Keddy
Leeds, Grenville & Lanark District Health Unit
Journal of Vegetation Science
University of Ottawa
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Paul A. Keddy (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d7d0b511d83f35e5ae2a7a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/3235676