Title of article
Network properties, species abundance and evolution in a model of evolutionary ecology
Author/Authors
Anderson، نويسنده , , Paul E. and Jensen، نويسنده , , Henrik Jeldtoft Jensen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
8
From page
551
To page
558
Abstract
We study the evolution of the network properties of a populated network embedded in a genotype space characterized by either a low or a high number of potential links, with particular emphasis on the connectivity and clustering. Evolution produces two distinct types of network. When a specific genotype is only able to influence a few other genotypes, the ecosystem consists of separate non-interacting clusters (i.e. isolated compartments) in genotype space. When different types may influence a large number of other sites, the network becomes one large interconnected cluster. The distribution of interaction strengths—but not the number of connections—changes significantly with time. We find that the species abundance is only realistic for a high level of species connectivity. This suggests that real ecosystems form one interconnected whole in which selection leads to stronger interactions between the different types. Analogies with niche and neutral theory and assembly models are also considered.
Keywords
Ecosystems , species abundance distribution , Evolution and self-organization , Neutral and niche theory , Networks
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Record number
1536844
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