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Slight differences among individuals and the unified neutral theory of biodiversity
Authors:Fuentes Marcelino
Affiliation:Facultade de Ciencias, Universidade da Coru?a, E-15071 A Coru?a, Spain. mfuentes@udc.es
Abstract:The unified neutral theory of biodiversity provides a very simple and counterintuitive explanation of species diversity patterns. By specifying speciation, community size and dispersal, and completely ignoring differences among individual organisms and species, it generates biodiversity patterns that remarkably resemble natural ones. Here I show that adding even slight differences among organisms generates very different patterns and predictions. In large communities with widespread dispersal, heritable differences in viability among individual organisms lead to biodiversity patterns characterised by the overdominance of a single species comprising organisms with relatively high fitness. In communities with local dispersal, the same differences produce rapid community extinction. I conclude that the unified neutral theory is not robust to slight deviations from its most controversial assumption.
Keywords:Dispersal   Ecological community   Ecological drift   Deleterious mutation   Neutral community   Spatial ecology   Species coexistence
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