The stochastic community and the logistic-J distribution
Authored by AK Dewdney
Date Published: 2003
DOI: 10.1016/j.actao.2002.12.001
Sponsors:
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Platforms:
Pascal
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
A new formal model called the multispecies logistical (MSL) system
produces species/abundance distributions that are compared statistically
with those found in natural communities. The system, which is able to
handle thousands of individuals from hundreds of species, iteratively
selects random pairs of individuals and transfers a unit of biomass (or
energy) between the respective species. Several elaborations of the
model, including those with trophic compartments, appear to produce the
same distribution. The theoretical distribution underlying the MSL
system is a hyperbolic section, here called the logistie-J distribution.
In the study reported here, the logistic-J distribution has been fitted
to the species-abundance histograms of 125 randomly selected
taxocoenoses. Since the overall chi square score of the logistic-J
achieved near-optimality in this study, it cannot be distinguished
statistically from the J-curves observed by field biologists. For
comparison, the log-series distribution was given the same test and
scored significantly higher (more poorly) than the mean logistic-J
score. If there is a single, major distribution underlying natural
communities, it is not the log-series distribution. Nor, owing to a
mathematical error in its formulation, can it be the lognormal
distribution. In the MSL system each species follows a ``stochastic
orbit{''} about the mean abundance producing, in consequence, the
logistic-J distribution. Such orbits are produced by any system in which
the probabilities of reproduction and death are approximately equal.
Accordingly, the ``stochastic communities hypothesis{''} is proposed
here as the overall mechanism governing abundances in all natural
communities. It is not a single mechanism, per se, but the net effect of
all environmental influences. (C) 2003 Editions scientifiques et
medicales Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.
Tags
Dynamics
Model
Species-abundance