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Competition and Coexistence in Regional Habitats
- Source :
- The American Naturalist. 159:498-508
- Publication Year :
- 2002
- Publisher :
- University of Chicago Press, 2002.
-
Abstract
- Habitat heterogeneity plays a key role in the dynamics and structures of communities. In this article, a two-species metapopulation model that includes local competitive dynamics is analyzed to study the population dynamics of two competing species in spatially structured habitats. When local stochastic extinction can be ignored, there are, as in Lotka-Volterra equations, four outcomes of interspecific competition in this model. The outcomes of competition depend on the competitive intensity between the competing pairs. An inferior competitor and a superior competitor, or two strongly competing species, can never stably coexist, whereas two weak competitors (even if they are very similar species) may coexist over the long term in such environments. Local stochastic extinction may greatly affect the outcomes of interspecific competition. Two competing species can or cannot stably coexist depending not only on the competitive intensity between the competing pairs but also on their precompetitive distributions. Two weak competitors that have similar precompetitive distributions can always regionally coexist. Two strongly competing species that competitively exclude each other in more stable habitats may be able to stably coexist in highly heterogenous environments if they have similar precompetitive distributions. There is also a chance for an inferior competitor to coexist regionally or even to exclude a superior competitor when the superior competitor has a narrow precompetitive distribution and the inferior competitor has a wide precompetitive distribution.
- Subjects :
- Coexistence theory
education.field_of_study
Extinction threshold
Ecology
media_common.quotation_subject
Population
Metapopulation
Interspecific competition
Biology
Storage effect
Competition (biology)
Competitive exclusion principle
education
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
media_common
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15375323 and 00030147
- Volume :
- 159
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The American Naturalist
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7bd2e6e16a5a4718a72c500dd953d896