The concerted emergence of well-known spatial and temporal ecological patterns in an evolutionary food web model in space

Abstract Ecological systems show a variety of characteristic patterns of biodiversity in space and time. It is a challenge for theory to find models that can reproduce and explain the observed patterns. Since the advent of island biogeography these models revolve around speciation, dispersal, and ex...

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Main Authors: Michaela Hamm, Barbara Drossel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-02-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-84077-0
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spelling doaj-f56eaf3db49c4b838c1437abc888443d2021-03-11T12:18:01ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-02-0111111210.1038/s41598-021-84077-0The concerted emergence of well-known spatial and temporal ecological patterns in an evolutionary food web model in spaceMichaela Hamm0Barbara Drossel1Institut für Festkörperphysik, TU DarmstadtInstitut für Festkörperphysik, TU DarmstadtAbstract Ecological systems show a variety of characteristic patterns of biodiversity in space and time. It is a challenge for theory to find models that can reproduce and explain the observed patterns. Since the advent of island biogeography these models revolve around speciation, dispersal, and extinction, but they usually neglect trophic structure. Here, we propose and study a spatially extended evolutionary food web model that allows us to study large spatial systems with several trophic layers. Our computer simulations show that the model gives rise simultaneously to several biodiversity patterns in space and time, from species abundance distributions to the waxing and waning of geographic ranges. We find that trophic position in the network plays a crucial role when it comes to the time evolution of range sizes, because the trophic context restricts the occurrence and survival of species especially on higher trophic levels.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-84077-0
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michaela Hamm
Barbara Drossel
spellingShingle Michaela Hamm
Barbara Drossel
The concerted emergence of well-known spatial and temporal ecological patterns in an evolutionary food web model in space
Scientific Reports
author_facet Michaela Hamm
Barbara Drossel
author_sort Michaela Hamm
title The concerted emergence of well-known spatial and temporal ecological patterns in an evolutionary food web model in space
title_short The concerted emergence of well-known spatial and temporal ecological patterns in an evolutionary food web model in space
title_full The concerted emergence of well-known spatial and temporal ecological patterns in an evolutionary food web model in space
title_fullStr The concerted emergence of well-known spatial and temporal ecological patterns in an evolutionary food web model in space
title_full_unstemmed The concerted emergence of well-known spatial and temporal ecological patterns in an evolutionary food web model in space
title_sort concerted emergence of well-known spatial and temporal ecological patterns in an evolutionary food web model in space
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Ecological systems show a variety of characteristic patterns of biodiversity in space and time. It is a challenge for theory to find models that can reproduce and explain the observed patterns. Since the advent of island biogeography these models revolve around speciation, dispersal, and extinction, but they usually neglect trophic structure. Here, we propose and study a spatially extended evolutionary food web model that allows us to study large spatial systems with several trophic layers. Our computer simulations show that the model gives rise simultaneously to several biodiversity patterns in space and time, from species abundance distributions to the waxing and waning of geographic ranges. We find that trophic position in the network plays a crucial role when it comes to the time evolution of range sizes, because the trophic context restricts the occurrence and survival of species especially on higher trophic levels.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-84077-0
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