How collectively integrated are ecological communities?

Author:

Zelnik Yuval R.12ORCID,Galiana Nuria3ORCID,Barbier Matthieu45ORCID,Loreau Michel67ORCID,Galbraith Eric89,Arnoldi Jean‐François6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Crop Production Ecology Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) Uppsala Sweden

2. Department of Ecology Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) Uppsala Sweden

3. Department of Biogeography and Global Change National Museum of Natural Sciences (CSIC) Madrid Spain

4. CIRAD UMR PHIM Montpellier France

5. PHIM Plant Health Institute University of Montpellier, CIRAD, INRAE, Institut Agro, IRD Montpellier France

6. Theoretical and Experimental Ecology Station CNRS Moulis Moulis France

7. Institute of Ecology, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing China

8. Department of Earth and Planetary Science McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada

9. Institut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals (ICTA‐UAB) Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Barcelona Spain

Abstract

AbstractBeyond abiotic conditions, do population dynamics mostly depend on a species' direct predators, preys and conspecifics? Or can indirect feedback that ripples across the whole community be equally important? Determining where ecological communities sit on the spectrum between these two characterizations requires a metric able to capture the difference between them. Here we show that the spectral radius of a community's interaction matrix provides such a metric, thus a measure of ecological collectivity, which is accessible from imperfect knowledge of biotic interactions and related to observable signatures. This measure of collectivity integrates existing approaches to complexity, interaction structure and indirect interactions. Our work thus provides an original perspective on the question of to what degree communities are more than loose collections of species or simple interaction motifs and explains when pragmatic reductionist approaches ought to suffice or fail when applied to ecological communities.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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