Title of article
When and why do non-neutral metacommunities appear neutral?
Author/Authors
Steven C. Walker، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
14
From page
318
To page
331
Abstract
Hubbellʹs neutral theory assumes that all species in a community have the same per capita fitness. Despite the overwhelming evidence against this assumption in most communities the neutral theory has often been, though not always, successful at predicting patterns of diversity in nature. I analyze a non-neutral model in order to suggest conditions under which observed species-abundance distributions (SADs) could be expected to resemble neutral distributions. The non-neutral model consists of two guilds of species such that (1) individuals between guilds do not interact, (2) dynamics within guilds follow Hubbellʹs model and (3) neutral parameters between guilds differ. This two-guild model generates SADs that appear neutral in some cases and clearly non-neutral in other cases. This result suggests that SADs may be more informative about niche structure than previously thought. The two-guild model could be tested in communities composed of fairly well-defined guilds or functional groups.
Keywords
Two-guild model , competition , Metacommunities , neutral theory , niche theory , Species diversity , community assembly , Species-abundance distributions , Stochastic modeling
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Record number
773976
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