Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, Alfred Denny Building, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, United Kingdom.
Ecology. 2010 Jun;91(6):1605-16. doi: 10.1890/09-0832.1.
Classical theory states that if conspecifics have a greater competitive effect on individuals than heterospecifics then coexistence should occur, and ecologists have spent much effort exploring ways to generate coexistence when this condition is not met. One process that has received particular attention in the last two decades is the effect of within-species aggregation and between-species segregation caused by limited dispersal. A number of theories have emerged as to how this common spatial pattern may help maintain biodiversity, and the general conclusion that has emerged is that spatial structure should almost always help competitors to coexist. But does spatial structure really always aid biodiversity? An individual-based model based on a spatial extension to the Lotka-Volterra competition equations and its mathematical approximation are presented to determine how local spatial structure may affect communities in which there is strong niche differentiation. Two main results emerge from analyses of the models. First, intraspecific competition being greater than interspecific competition coexistence may no longer be sufficient to generate coexistence when spatial structure is strong; and the species with the highest intraspecific competition coefficient is likely to be excluded. Second, dominance hierarchies may be reversed so that a competitor may become the subordinate species when dispersal and competitive interactions occur over short spatial scales. Both results emerge because, even though a species may be globally rare, intense clumping means most interactions occur between conspecifics, and if this is very intense it may be sufficient to stop a species from invading. However, long-range dispersal may ameliorate these effects by reducing the frequency of conspecific interactions, and this is especially important when a species is rare since it is very likely to land in an area dominated by heterospecifics. These results are most relevant to sessile organisms that produce relatively few viable offspring that survive to adulthood and that have relatively weak dispersal. The conclusion is that within-species aggregation may hinder coexistence when the toughest competitor an individual is likely to face is a member of its own species.
经典理论认为,如果同种个体对个体的竞争效应大于异种个体,那么共存就应该发生,生态学家已经花费了大量精力探索在这种情况下如何产生共存。在过去的二十年中,有一种过程受到了特别关注,那就是由于扩散受限而导致的种内聚集和种间隔离的影响。有许多理论涌现出来,说明这种常见的空间模式如何有助于维持生物多样性,而出现的一般结论是,空间结构应该几乎总是有助于竞争者共存。但是,空间结构真的总是有助于生物多样性吗?本文提出了一种基于 Lotka-Volterra 竞争方程的空间扩展及其数学逼近的基于个体的模型,以确定局部空间结构如何影响具有强烈生态位分化的群落。模型分析得出了两个主要结果。首先,当空间结构较强时,种内竞争大于种间竞争,共存可能不再足以产生共存;种内竞争系数最高的物种很可能被排斥。其次,优势等级可能会颠倒,因此当扩散和竞争相互作用发生在短距离尺度上时,竞争者可能成为从属物种。这两个结果的出现是因为,即使一个物种在全球范围内是罕见的,强烈的聚集意味着大多数相互作用发生在同种个体之间,如果这种聚集非常强烈,它可能足以阻止一个物种的入侵。然而,长距离扩散可以通过减少同种相互作用的频率来减轻这些影响,当一个物种很少时,这一点尤其重要,因为它很可能降落在一个由异种个体主导的区域。这些结果与那些产生相对较少能存活到成年的可育后代且扩散能力较弱的固着生物最相关。结论是,当个体最有可能面对的最强竞争者是其自身物种时,种内聚集可能会阻碍共存。