The evolution of trophic structure
Authored by G Bell
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1038/sj.hdy.6801032
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Abstract
The trophic relationships of an ecological community were represented by
digital individuals consuming resources or prey within a simulated
ecosystem and producing offspring that may differ from their parents.
When individuals meet, a few simple rules are used to decide the outcome
of their interaction. Trophically complex systems persist for long
periods of time even in finite communities, provided that the strength
of predator-prey interaction is sufficient to repay the cost of
maintenance. The topology of the food web and important system-level
attributes such as overall productivity follow from the rules of
engagement: that is, the macroscopic properties of the ecosystem follow
from the microscopic attributes of individuals, without the need to
invoke the emergence of novel processes at the level of the whole
system. Evolutionarily stable webs exist only when the pool of available
species is small. If the pool is large, or speciation is allowed, species composition changes continually, while overall community
properties are maintained. Ecologically separate and topologically
different source webs based on the same pool of resources usually
coexist for long periods of time, through negative frequency-dependent
selection at the level of the source web as a whole. Thus, the evolved
food web of species-rich communities is a highly dynamic structure with
continual species turnover. It both imposes selection on each species
and itself responds to selection, but selection does not necessarily
maximize stability, productivity or any other community property.
Tags
Dynamics
Model
Ecosystem
adaptive agents
Consequences
Size
Communities
Food-web structure
Ecological networks
Connectance