Directionality and community-level selection

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Many ecological community dynamics display some degree of directionality, known as succession patterns. But complex interaction networks frequently tend to non-directional dynamics such as chaos, unless additional structures or mechanisms impose some form of, often fragile or shot-lived, directionality. We exhibit here a novel property of emergent long-lasting directionality in competitive communities, which relies on very minimal assumptions. We model communities where each species has a few strong competitive interactions, and many weak ones. We find that, at high enough diversity, the dynamics become directional, meaning that the community state can be characterized by a function that increases in time, which we call ‘maturity'. In the presence of noise, the community composition changes toward increasingly stable and productive states. This scenario occupies a middle ground between deterministic succession and purely random species associations: there are many overlapping stable states, with stochastic transitions, that are nevertheless biased in a particular direction. When a spatial dimension is added in the form of a meta-community, higher-maturity community states are able to expand in space, replacing others by (exact or approximate) copies of themselves. This leads to community-level selection, with the same maturity function acting as fitness. Classic concepts from evolutionary dynamics provide a powerful analogy to understand this strictly ecological, community-level phenomenon of emergent directionality.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)489-500
Number of pages12
JournalOikos
Volume130
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2021

Keywords

  • community-level selection
  • multi-stability
  • succession

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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