2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2007.01041.x
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Resolving the biodiversity paradox

Abstract: The paradox of biodiversity involves three elements, (i) mathematical models predict that species must differ in specific ways in order to coexist as stable ecological communities, (ii) such differences are difficult to identify, yet (iii) there is widespread evidence of stability in natural communities. Debate has centred on two views. The first explanation involves tradeoffs along a small number of axes, including 'colonization-competition', resource competition (light, water, nitrogen for plants, including … Show more

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Cited by 192 publications
(213 citation statements)
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References 53 publications
(125 reference statements)
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“…Such a dual perception of ecological processes hampers a synthetic understanding of community reassembly in regenerating forests (6). Indeed, in complex adaptive systems, erratic patterns can arise from either stochastic processes that emerge from seemingly random fluctuations, or from unexplained but causal variability emerging from "unknown unknowns" (33). Thus, despite the high levels of ecological noise observed here, what we typically view as stochasticity may ultimately be explained by deterministic factors that have not been measured or incorporated.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Such a dual perception of ecological processes hampers a synthetic understanding of community reassembly in regenerating forests (6). Indeed, in complex adaptive systems, erratic patterns can arise from either stochastic processes that emerge from seemingly random fluctuations, or from unexplained but causal variability emerging from "unknown unknowns" (33). Thus, despite the high levels of ecological noise observed here, what we typically view as stochasticity may ultimately be explained by deterministic factors that have not been measured or incorporated.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…The call for a reconciliation of niche and neutral models (25,26) of community assembly has, until now, been met by adapting what were deterministic niche-based models to include stochasticity and immigration (27)(28)(29). We have argued in the introduction to this paper that the emergent parameter-rich models defy calibration for very diverse microbial communities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The initial polarization of "nichists" and "neutralists" caused by Hubbell's (9) monograph has waned and recognition that neutral models embody mechanisms (birth, death, immigration, and sometimes speciation) that are indisputable features of virtually all biological systems (24) has led to calls for, what some call, "reconciliation" (25,26). To this end, a variety of niche models have been extended to include some stochastic elements (27)(28)(29).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, fitness and stabilizing niche differences could be correlated with distinct sets of traits (17). Moreover, it may be that niche and fitness differences are best described by multivariate suites of traits, supporting a hypothesis of high-dimensional coexistence between species in communities (18)(19)(20)(21).…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%