Theory suggests that the spatial context within which species interactions occur will have major implications for the outcome of competition and ultimately, coexistence, but empirical tests are rare. This is surprising given that individuals of species in real communities are typically distributed nonrandomly in space. Nonrandom spatial arrangement has the potential to modify the relative strength of intra- and interspecific competition by changing the ratio of conspecific to heterospecific competitive encounters, particularly among sessile species where interactions among individuals occur on local scales. Here we test the influence of aggregated and random spatial arrangements on population trajectories of competing species in benthic, ma...
Journal ArticleA single trade-off between competitive ability and mortality has been shown to suppor...
We tested the prediction from spatial competition models that intraspecific aggregation may promote ...
How large ecosystems can create and maintain the remarkable biodiversity we see in nature is probabl...
We investigated the importance of the spatial context of interactions in a multispecies marine epib...
International audienceNon-random patterns of species segregation and aggregation within ecological c...
One of the key problems in ecology is our need to anticipate the set of locations in which a species...
The absence of 'super competitors' in nature is usually attributed to organisms facing trade-offs in...
Amongst the various hypotheses that challenged to explain the coexistence of species with similar li...
Competitive intransitivity is mostly considered outside the main body of coexistence theories that r...
© 2014 Velázquez et al. Coexistence of apparently similar species remains an enduring paradox in eco...
There is substantial controversy on whether species interactions (particularly competition) shape sp...
International audienceThe question whether communities should be viewed as superorganisms or loose c...
Formal links between theory and data are a critical goal for ecology. However, while our current und...
When observed at small spatial scales the variability in ecological patterns can be confusing and pr...
Understanding how stochastic fluctuations in the environment influence population dynamics is crucia...
Journal ArticleA single trade-off between competitive ability and mortality has been shown to suppor...
We tested the prediction from spatial competition models that intraspecific aggregation may promote ...
How large ecosystems can create and maintain the remarkable biodiversity we see in nature is probabl...
We investigated the importance of the spatial context of interactions in a multispecies marine epib...
International audienceNon-random patterns of species segregation and aggregation within ecological c...
One of the key problems in ecology is our need to anticipate the set of locations in which a species...
The absence of 'super competitors' in nature is usually attributed to organisms facing trade-offs in...
Amongst the various hypotheses that challenged to explain the coexistence of species with similar li...
Competitive intransitivity is mostly considered outside the main body of coexistence theories that r...
© 2014 Velázquez et al. Coexistence of apparently similar species remains an enduring paradox in eco...
There is substantial controversy on whether species interactions (particularly competition) shape sp...
International audienceThe question whether communities should be viewed as superorganisms or loose c...
Formal links between theory and data are a critical goal for ecology. However, while our current und...
When observed at small spatial scales the variability in ecological patterns can be confusing and pr...
Understanding how stochastic fluctuations in the environment influence population dynamics is crucia...
Journal ArticleA single trade-off between competitive ability and mortality has been shown to suppor...
We tested the prediction from spatial competition models that intraspecific aggregation may promote ...
How large ecosystems can create and maintain the remarkable biodiversity we see in nature is probabl...