Effects of evolutionary changes in prey use on the relationship between food web complexity and stability
Authored by Masakado Kawata, Wakako Yamaguchi, Michio Kondoh
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1007/s10144-010-0212-y
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Abstract
The relationship between food web complexity and stability has been the
subject of a long-standing debate in ecology. Although rapid changes in
the food web structure through adaptive foraging behavior can confer
stability to complex food webs, as reported by Kondoh (Science
299:1388-1391, 2003), the exact mechanisms behind this adaptation have
not been specified in previous studies; thus, the applicability of such
predictions to real ecosystems remains unclear. One mechanism of
adaptive foraging is evolutionary change in genetically determined prey
use. We constructed individual-based models of evolution of prey use by
predators assuming explicit population genetics processes, and examined
how this evolution affects the stability (i.e., the proportion of
species that persist) of the food web and whether the complexity of the
food web increased the stability of the prey-predator system. The
analysis showed that the stability of food webs decreased with
increasing complexity regardless of evolution of prey use by predators.
The effects of evolution on stability differed depending on the
assumptions made regarding genetic control of prey use. The
probabilities of species extinctions were associated with the
establishment or loss of trophic interactions via evolution of the
predator, indicating a clear link between structural changes in the food
web and community stability.
Tags
Diversity
Biodiversity
Predator
Population-dynamics
Interaction strength
Long-term evolution
Biological coevolution
Ecological networks
Community stability
Foraging adaptation