Spatial Complementarity and the Coexistence of Species
Authored by Jorge Velazquez, Juan P Garrahan, Markus P Eichhorn
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0114979
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
C
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/jorgevc/IBM-ecology-simulator
Abstract
Coexistence of apparently similar species remains an enduring paradox in
ecology. Spatial structure has been predicted to enable coexistence even
when population-level models predict competitive exclusion if it causes
each species to limit its own population more than that of its
competitor. Nevertheless, existing hypotheses conflict with regard to
whether clustering favours or precludes coexistence. The spatial
segregation hypothesis predicts that in clustered populations the
frequency of intra-specific interactions will be increased, causing each
species to be self-limiting. Alternatively, individuals of the same
species might compete over greater distances, known as heteromyopia, breaking down clusters and opening space for a second species to invade.
In this study we create an individual-based model in homogeneous
two-dimensional space for two putative sessile species differing only in
their demographic rates and the range and strength of their competitive
interactions. We fully characterise the parameter space within which
coexistence occurs beyond population-level predictions, thereby
revealing a region of coexistence generated by a previously-unrecognised
process which we term the triadic mechanism. Here coexistence occurs due
to the ability of a second generation of offspring of the rarer species
to escape competition from their ancestors. We diagnose the conditions
under which each of three spatial coexistence mechanisms operates and
their characteristic spatial signatures. Deriving insights from a novel
metric - ecological pressure - we demonstrate that coexistence is not
solely determined by features of the numerically-dominant species. This
results in a common framework for predicting, given any pair of species
and knowledge of the relevant parameters, whether they will coexist, the
mechanism by which they will do so, and the resultant spatial pattern of
the community. Spatial coexistence arises from complementary
combinations of traits in each species rather than solely through
self-limitation.
Tags
Diversity
ecology
patterns
Model
Population-dynamics
Experimental plant-communities
Intraspecific aggregation
Competitive
interactions