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Maximal ecological diversity exceeds evolutionary diversity in model ecosystems
Authors:Ilan N Rubin  Yaroslav Ispolatov  Michael Doebeli
Institution:1. Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;2. University of Santiago of Chile (USACH), Physics Department, Santiago, Chile
Abstract:Understanding community saturation is fundamental to ecological theory. While investigations of the diversity of evolutionary stable states (ESSs) are widespread, the diversity of communities that have yet to reach an evolutionary endpoint is poorly understood. We use Lotka–Volterra dynamics and trait-based competition to compare the diversity of randomly assembled communities to the diversity of the ESS. We show that, with a large enough founding diversity (whether assembled at once or through sequential invasions), the number of long-time surviving species exceeds that of the ESS. However, the excessive founding diversity required to assemble a saturated community increases rapidly with the dimension of phenotype space. Additionally, traits present in communities resulting from random assembly are more clustered in phenotype space compared to random, although still markedly less ordered than the ESS. By combining theories of random assembly and ESSs we bring a new viewpoint to both the saturation and random assembly literature.
Keywords:adaptive dynamics  community assembly  competition  diversity  ESS  evolutionary stable state  maximal ecological diversity  niche packing  random assembly  saturation
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