Literature DB >> 16085108

Does foraging adaptation create the positive complexity-stability relationship in realistic food-web structure?

Michio Kondoh1.   

Abstract

The adaptive food-web hypothesis suggests that an adaptive foraging switch inverses the classically negative complexity-stability relationships of food webs into positive ones, providing a possible resolution for the long-standing paradox of how populations persist in a complex natural food web. However, its applicability to natural ecosystems has been questioned, because the positive relationship does not emerge when a niche model, a realistic "benchmark" of food-web models, is used. I hypothesize that, in the niche model, increasing connectance influences the fraction of basal species to destabilize the system and this masks the inversion of the negative complexity-stability relationship in the presence of adaptive foraging. A model analysis shows that, if this confounding effect is eliminated, then, even in a niche model, a population is more likely to persist in a more complex food web. This result supports the robustness of adaptive food-web hypothesis and reveals the condition in which the hypothesis should be tested.

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16085108     DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2005.06.028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Theor Biol        ISSN: 0022-5193            Impact factor:   2.691


  6 in total

1.  Anti-predator defence and the complexity-stability relationship of food webs.

Authors:  Michio Kondoh
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2007-07-07       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Complex food webs prevent competitive exclusion among producer species.

Authors:  Ulrich Brose
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2008-11-07       Impact factor: 5.349

3.  Food-chain length and adaptive foraging.

Authors:  Michio Kondoh; Kunihiko Ninomiya
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2009-06-10       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Networked buffering: a basic mechanism for distributed robustness in complex adaptive systems.

Authors:  James M Whitacre; Axel Bender
Journal:  Theor Biol Med Model       Date:  2010-06-15       Impact factor: 2.432

5.  Persistence increases with diversity and connectance in trophic metacommunities.

Authors:  Dominique Gravel; Elsa Canard; Frédéric Guichard; Nicolas Mouquet
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-05-27       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Stability and complexity in model meta-ecosystems.

Authors:  Dominique Gravel; François Massol; Mathew A Leibold
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2016-08-24       Impact factor: 14.919

  6 in total

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