The effects of space and diversity of interaction types on the stability of complex ecological networks
Authored by Miguel Lurgi, Daniel Montoya, Jose M Montoya
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s12080-015-0264-x
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
The relationship between structure and stability in ecological networks
and the effect of spatial dynamics on natural communities have both been
major foci of ecological research for decades. Network research has
traditionally focused on a single interaction type at a time (e.g. food
webs, mutualistic networks). Networks comprising different types of
interactions have recently started to be empirically characterized.
Patterns observed in these networks and their implications for stability
demand for further theoretical investigations. Here, we employed a
spatially explicit model to disentangle the effects of
mutualism/antagonism ratios in food web dynamics and stability. We found
that increasing levels of plant-animal mutualistic interactions
generally resulted in more stable communities. More importantly, increasing the proportion of mutualistic vs. antagonistic interactions
at the base of the food web affects different aspects of ecological
stability in different directions, although never negatively. Stability
is either not influenced by increasing mutualism-for the cases of
population stability and species' spatial distributions-or is positively
influenced by it-for spatial aggregation of species. Additionally, we
observe that the relative increase of mutualistic relationships
decreases the strength of biotic interactions in general within the
ecological network. Our work highlights the importance of considering
several dimensions of stability simultaneously to understand the
dynamics of communities comprising multiple interaction types.
Tags
models
Biodiversity
ecosystems
patterns
systems
Instability
Real food webs
Mutualistic networks