Bonsall Michael B, Jansen Vincent A A, Hassell Michael P
Department of Biological Sciences, Imperial College London, Silwood Park Campus, Ascot, Berkshire SL5 7PY, UK.
Science. 2004 Oct 1;306(5693):111-4. doi: 10.1126/science.1100680.
Ecological theory predicts that competition for a limiting resource will lead to the exclusion of species unless the within-species effects outweigh the between-species effects. Understanding how multiple competitors might coexist on a single resource has focused on the prescriptive formalism of a necessary niche width and limiting similarity. Here, we show how continuously varying life histories and trade-offs in these characteristics can allow multiple competitors to coexist, and we reveal how limiting similarity emerges and is shaped by the ecological and evolutionary characteristics of competitors. In this way, we illustrate how the interplay of ecological and evolutionary processes acts to shape ecological communities in a unique way. This leads us to argue that evolutionary processes (life-history trait trade-offs) are fundamental to the understanding of the structure of ecological communities.
生态理论预测,对有限资源的竞争将导致物种的排斥,除非种内效应超过种间效应。理解多个竞争者如何在单一资源上共存,一直聚焦于必要生态位宽度和极限相似性的规范性形式。在此,我们展示了这些特征中持续变化的生活史和权衡如何能使多个竞争者共存,并且揭示了极限相似性是如何出现以及如何由竞争者的生态和进化特征所塑造。通过这种方式,我们阐明了生态和进化过程的相互作用如何以独特方式塑造生态群落。这使我们认为,进化过程(生活史性状权衡)对于理解生态群落结构至关重要。