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Mean growth rate when rare is not a reliable metric for persistence of species
Authors:Jayant Pande  Tak Fung  Ryan Chisholm  Nadav M Shnerb
Abstract:The coexistence of many species within ecological communities poses a long‐standing theoretical puzzle. Modern coexistence theory (MCT) and related techniques explore this phenomenon by examining the chance of a species population growing from rarity in the presence of all other species. The mean growth rate when rare, urn:x-wiley:1461023X:media:ele13430:ele13430-math-0001, is used in MCT as a metric that measures persistence properties (like invasibility or time to extinction) of a population. Here we critique this reliance on urn:x-wiley:1461023X:media:ele13430:ele13430-math-0002 and show that it fails to capture the effect of temporal random abundance variations on persistence properties. The problem becomes particularly severe when an increase in the amplitude of stochastic temporal environmental variations leads to an increase in urn:x-wiley:1461023X:media:ele13430:ele13430-math-0003, since at the same time it enhances random abundance fluctuations and the two effects are inherently intertwined. In this case, the chance of invasion and the mean extinction time of a population may even go down as urn:x-wiley:1461023X:media:ele13430:ele13430-math-0004 increases.
Keywords:Coexistence  environmental stochasticity  invasibility  lottery model  mean growth rate  mean time to extinction  modern coexistence theory  persistence
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