Non‐random interactions within and across guilds shape the potential to coexist in multi‐trophic ecological communities

Author:

García‐Callejas David123ORCID,Godoy Oscar2ORCID,Buche Lisa2ORCID,Hurtado María12ORCID,Lanuza Jose B.1ORCID,Allen‐Perkins Alfonso14ORCID,Bartomeus Ignasi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Estación Biológica de Doñana (EBD‐CSIC) Seville Spain

2. Instituto Universitario de Ciencias del Mar (INMAR) Departamento de Biología, Universidad de Cádiz E‐11510 Puerto Real Spain

3. School of Biological Sciences University of Canterbury 8140 Christchurch Private Bag 4800 New Zealand

4. Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica, Automática y Física Aplicada, ETSIDI Technical University of Madrid 28040 Madrid Spain

Abstract

AbstractTheory posits that the persistence of species in ecological communities is shaped by their interactions within and across trophic guilds. However, we lack empirical evaluations of how the structure, strength and sign of biotic interactions drive the potential to coexist in diverse multi‐trophic communities. Here, we model community feasibility domains, a theoretically informed measure of multi‐species coexistence probability, from grassland communities comprising more than 45 species on average from three trophic guilds (plants, pollinators and herbivores). Contrary to our hypothesis, increasing community complexity, measured either as the number of guilds or community richness, did not decrease community feasibility. Rather, we observed that high degrees of species self‐regulation and niche partitioning allow for maintaining larger levels of community feasibility and higher species persistence in more diverse communities. Our results show that biotic interactions within and across guilds are not random in nature and both structures significantly contribute to maintaining multi‐trophic diversity.

Funder

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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