Effects of predator-specific defence on biodiversity and community complexity in two-trophic-level communities |
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Authors: | Hiroyuki Matsuda Michio Hori Peter A. Abrams |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Kyushu University Higashi-ku, 812 Fukuoka, Japan;(2) Department of Biology, Wakayama Medical College, 651 Hironishi, 640 Wakayama, Japan;(3) Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota, 1987 Upper Buford Circle, 55108 St Paul, MN, USA;(4) Present address: Department of Zoology, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, 606 Kyoto, Japan |
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Abstract: | Summary Antipredator strategies employed by prey may be specific (effective against only one type of predator) or non-specific (effective against all predators). To examine the effects of the specificity of antipredator behaviour on biodiversity and community complexity, we analyse mathematical models including both evolutionary and population dynamics of a system including multiple prey species and multiple predator species. The models assume that all predator species change in their prey choice and all prey species have evolutionary change in their antipredator effort in evolution. The traits of each species change in an adaptive manner, whose rate is proportional to the slope of their fitness function. We calculate community complexity, resource-overlap between predators, an index of biodiversity and other properties of the coevolutionarily stable community for two cases: (1) all prey species have non-specific antipredator behaviour and (2) all prey species have predator-specific defence. Predator-specificity in defence increases community complexity, resource-overlap between predators, the total abundance of predators and the ratio of predator to prey abundance. Specific defence also decreases the number of isolated subwebs within the entire foodweb. |
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Keywords: | co-evolution exploitative mutualism anti-predator behaviour co-evolutionarily stable state community structure |
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