Community ecology has traditionally relied on the competitive exclusion principle, a piece of common wisdom in conceptual frameworks developed to describe species assemblages. Key concepts in community ecology, such as limiting similarity and niche partitioning, are based on competitive exclusion. However, this classical paradigm in ecology relies on implications derived from simple, deterministic models. Here we show how the predictions of a symmetric, deterministic model about the way extinctions proceed can be utterly different from the results derived from the same model when ecological drift (demographic stochasticity) is explicitly considered. Using analytical approximations to the steady-state conditional probabilities for assemblage...
Understanding the relationships between environmental fluctuations, population dynamics and species ...
© 2016 Elsevier B.V.A key problem in ecology is to predict the presence–absence of species across a ...
The deterministic or stochastic nature of the rules that regulate which species co-exist in a commun...
Community ecology has traditionally relied on the competitive exclusion principle, a piece of common...
If two species live on a single resource, the one with a slight advantage will out-compete the other...
A predictive theory of population extinction for natural populations requires integrating the effect...
We use metapopulation models based on a classic competition-colonization trade-off in order to (1) s...
Recent studies have highlighted the importance of higher‐order competitive interactions in stabilizi...
The distribution of interaction strengths among community members has important consequences for ass...
Competitive exclusion – n species cannot coexist on fewer than n limiting resources in a constant an...
The competitive exclusion principle postulates that due to abiotic constraints, resource usage, inte...
Abstract. Finite-size fluctuations arising in the dynamics of competing populations may have dramati...
We analyze a general theory for coexistence and extinction of ecological communities that are influe...
The competitive exclusion principle is one of the most influential concepts in ecology. The classica...
Global extinction of a species is sadly irreversible. At a local scale, however, extinctions may be ...
Understanding the relationships between environmental fluctuations, population dynamics and species ...
© 2016 Elsevier B.V.A key problem in ecology is to predict the presence–absence of species across a ...
The deterministic or stochastic nature of the rules that regulate which species co-exist in a commun...
Community ecology has traditionally relied on the competitive exclusion principle, a piece of common...
If two species live on a single resource, the one with a slight advantage will out-compete the other...
A predictive theory of population extinction for natural populations requires integrating the effect...
We use metapopulation models based on a classic competition-colonization trade-off in order to (1) s...
Recent studies have highlighted the importance of higher‐order competitive interactions in stabilizi...
The distribution of interaction strengths among community members has important consequences for ass...
Competitive exclusion – n species cannot coexist on fewer than n limiting resources in a constant an...
The competitive exclusion principle postulates that due to abiotic constraints, resource usage, inte...
Abstract. Finite-size fluctuations arising in the dynamics of competing populations may have dramati...
We analyze a general theory for coexistence and extinction of ecological communities that are influe...
The competitive exclusion principle is one of the most influential concepts in ecology. The classica...
Global extinction of a species is sadly irreversible. At a local scale, however, extinctions may be ...
Understanding the relationships between environmental fluctuations, population dynamics and species ...
© 2016 Elsevier B.V.A key problem in ecology is to predict the presence–absence of species across a ...
The deterministic or stochastic nature of the rules that regulate which species co-exist in a commun...