Current debate in community ecology focuses on two competing theories for species coexistence in diverse communities: dispersal vs. niche assembly. Dispersal theory emphasizes the role of chance colonization and dispersal limitation whereas niche theory emphasizes species differences in requirements for potentially limiting resources. Plant species distribution patterns have frequently been found to correlate with soil conditions indicating niche assembly processes are important in shaping plant communities. My research links patterns of palm species and soil nutrient distributions with the processes generating palm-soil associations in the lower montane forests of the Fortuna Forest Reserve in western
Results/Conclusions
Understory palm communities were non-randomly distributed among forests differing in soil nutrient availability. Palm – soil associations were strongly correlated with base cations and nitrogen availability. Using an experimental approach, I examined the potential of the three aforementioned mechanisms in generating palm-soil associations over soil nutrient gradients in