Foraging adaptation and the relationship between food-web complexity and stability
- PMID: 12610303
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1079154
Foraging adaptation and the relationship between food-web complexity and stability
Abstract
Ecological theory suggests that complex food webs should not persist because of their inherent instability. "Real" ecosystems often support a large number of interacting species. A mathematical model shows that fluctuating short-term selection on trophic links, arising from a consumer's adaptive food choice, is a key to the long-term stability of complex communities. Without adaptive foragers, food-web complexity destabilizes community composition; whereas in their presence, complexity may enhance community persistence through facilitation of dynamical food-web reconstruction that buffers environmental fluctuations. The model predicts a linkage pattern consistent with field observations.
Comment in
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Comment on "Foraging adaptation and the relationship between food-web complexity and stability".Science. 2003 Aug 15;301(5635):918; author reply 918. doi: 10.1126/science.1085902. Science. 2003. PMID: 12920282 No abstract available.
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