Environment and Sustainability Institute, University of Exeter, Penryn, Cornwall, TR10 9EZ, UK.
Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, Silwood Park Campus, Ascot, Berkshire, SL5 7PY, UK.
Ecol Lett. 2018 May;21(5):655-664. doi: 10.1111/ele.12932. Epub 2018 Mar 25.
Understanding how changes in temperature affect interspecific competition is critical for predicting changes in ecological communities with global warming. Here, we develop a theoretical model that links interspecific differences in the temperature dependence of resource acquisition and growth to the outcome of pairwise competition in phytoplankton. We parameterised our model with these metabolic traits derived from six species of freshwater phytoplankton and tested its ability to predict the outcome of competition in all pairwise combinations of the species in a factorial experiment, manipulating temperature and nutrient availability. The model correctly predicted the outcome of competition in 72% of the pairwise experiments, with competitive advantage determined by difference in thermal sensitivity of growth rates of the two species. These results demonstrate that metabolic traits play a key role in determining how changes in temperature influence interspecific competition and lay the foundation for mechanistically predicting the effects of warming in complex, multi-species communities.
了解温度变化如何影响种间竞争对于预测全球变暖对生态群落的变化至关重要。在这里,我们开发了一个理论模型,将资源获取和生长对温度的依赖性的种间差异与浮游植物对竞争的结果联系起来。我们用来自六种淡水浮游植物的这些代谢特征来参数化我们的模型,并在一个析因实验中用温度和养分供应来测试其预测所有物种两两组合竞争结果的能力。该模型正确预测了 72%的成对实验的竞争结果,竞争优势由两个物种的生长率对温度的敏感性差异决定。这些结果表明,代谢特征在决定温度变化如何影响种间竞争方面起着关键作用,并为在复杂的多物种群落中从机制上预测变暖的影响奠定了基础。