Authors
Ugo Bastolla, Michael Lässig, Susanna C Manrubia, Angelo Valleriani
Publication date
2005/8/21
Journal
Journal of theoretical biology
Volume
235
Issue
4
Pages
521-530
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
This is the first of two papers where we discuss the limits imposed by competition to the biodiversity of species communities. In this first paper, we study the coexistence of competing species at the fixed point of population dynamic equations. For many simple models, this imposes a limit on the width of the productivity distribution, which is more severe the more diverse the ecosystem is (1994, Theor. Popul. Biol. 45, 227–276). Here we review and generalize this analysis, beyond the “mean-field”-like approximation of the competition matrix used in previous works, and extend it to structured food webs. In all cases analysed, we obtain qualitatively similar relations between biodiversity and competition: the narrower the productivity distribution is, the more species can stably coexist. We discuss how this result, considered together with environmental fluctuations, limits the maximal biodiversity that a trophic level can host.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
U Bastolla, M Lässig, SC Manrubia, A Valleriani - Journal of theoretical biology, 2005