Literature DB >> 29285752

Will a small randomly assembled community be feasible and stable?

Chuliang Song1, Serguei Saavedra1.   

Abstract

How likely is it that few species can randomly assemble into a feasible and stable community? Some studies have answered that as long as the community is feasible, it will nearly always be stable. In contrast, other studies have answered that the likelihood is almost null. Here, we show that the origin of this debate has been the underestimation of the association of the parameter space of intrinsic growth rates with the feasibility and stability properties of small randomly-assembled communities. In particular, we demonstrate that not all parameterizations and sampling distributions of intrinsic growth rates lead to the same probabilities of stability and feasibility, which could mistakenly lead to under- or overestimate the stability properties of feasible communities. Additionally, we find that stability imposes a filtering of species abundances "towards" more even distributions in small feasible randomly-assembled communities. This indicates that the stability of feasible communities is inherently linked to the starting distribution of species abundances, a characteristic that many times has been ignored, but should be incorporated in manageable lab and field experiments. Overall, the return to this debate is a central reminder that a more systematic exploration of the feasible parameter space is necessary to derive general conclusions about the stability properties of ecological communities.
© 2018 by the Ecological Society of America.

Keywords:  feasibility; intrinsic growth rates; random matrices; small communities; species abundances; stability

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29285752     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2125

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


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2.  An Approach to Study Species Persistence in Unconstrained Random Networks.

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3.  Understanding the emergence of contingent and deterministic exclusion in multispecies communities.

Authors:  Chuliang Song; Lawrence H Uricchio; Erin A Mordecai; Serguei Saavedra
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4.  The ratio of single to co-colonization is key to complexity in interacting systems with multiple strains.

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  4 in total

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