2019
DOI: 10.1101/797704
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Quantifying the relative importance of competition, predation, and environmental variation for species coexistence

Abstract: 1Coexistence theory and food web theory are two cornerstones of the longstanding effort 2 to understand how species coexist. Although competition and predation are known to act 3 simultaneously in communities, theory and empirical study of the two processes continue to 4 be developed independently. Here, we integrate modern coexistence theory and food web 5 theory to simultaneously quantify the relative importance of predation, competition, and 6 environmental fluctuations for species coexistence. We first exa… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…With few exceptions, the investigated communities consisted of basal species competing for abiotic resources. It is entirely possible that our findings do not apply to higher trophic levels, as research hints to the possibility that higher trophic levels are driven by different coexistence mechanisms (Shoemaker et al, 2019). A deeper understanding of how two-species coexistence links to multi-species coexistence might give us a better understanding of why niche differences are important in two-species communities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…With few exceptions, the investigated communities consisted of basal species competing for abiotic resources. It is entirely possible that our findings do not apply to higher trophic levels, as research hints to the possibility that higher trophic levels are driven by different coexistence mechanisms (Shoemaker et al, 2019). A deeper understanding of how two-species coexistence links to multi-species coexistence might give us a better understanding of why niche differences are important in two-species communities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Second, we have little mechanistic understanding of why coexisting species exhibit higher niche differences leading to a prevalence of negative frequency dependence. Various mechanisms can be responsible for this result, including mechanisms driven by specific organismal traits (Gallego et al, 2019; Kraft et al, 2015), phenological traits (Godoy and Levine, 2014; Farrer et al, 2010; Martorell and Freckleton, 2014; Adler, HilleRisLambers, et al, 2009), and these mechanisms can be fluctuation-independent (Armitage and Jones, 2019) or fluctuation-dependant (Hallett, Shoemaker, et al, 2019). To provide such understanding here would be purely speculative, given our data.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, considering the influence of competition, predation or co-evolution in addition to the spatial arrangement of populations can provide new insights into the evolutionary processes that shape species' distributions (Hand et al 2015). Explicit models for species interactions in communities that interface with metagenomic and ultimately full genomic data are a futuristic area (Aldebert and Stouffer, 2018;Shoemaker et al 2019).…”
Section: Detecting Loci Under Selection: Population and Landscape Genmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, we have fluctuation dependent mechanisms, storage effects and relative non-linearities (Letten et al ., 2018; Zepeda & Martorell, 2019; Litchman, 2003; Ellner et al ., 2019), the interaction of evolution and fluctuations (Yamamichi et al ., 2020), and internally generated fluctuations (Huisman et al ., 2006). We now may have too many explanations for diversity rather than too few, as we know little about the relative importance of all these mechanisms (Shoemaker et al ., 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, we have little understanding of coexistence mechanisms in the highest trophic level or, more generally, how the entire community coexists (Godoy et al ., 2018). Additionally, modern coexistence theory is often applied to models with phenomenological or linear terms describing species interactions, excluding higher order interactions (Chesson, 2018; Germain et al ., 2016; Pérez-Ramos et al ., 2019) but see (Spaak et al ., 2021a; Shoemaker et al ., 2019; Spaak & De Laender, 2021; Spaak et al ., 2021b; Singh & Baruah, 2020; Letten & Stouffer, 2019). Consequentially, we have only limited understanding of the drivers and mechanisms of species coexistence in communities including multiple trophic levels and non-linear species interactions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%